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SCIENCE 




FURY% 






25 CENTS 







.r" 




V?*Ki 






(or, tT7) 



BY GROUCHO MARX 

W HAT do you want to save up a lot 
of money for? You’U never need 
the stuff. 

Why, just think of all the wonderful, 
wonderful things you can do without 
money. Things like — well, things like — 
On second thought, you’d better keep 
on saving, chum. Otherwise you’re 
licked. 

For instance, how are you ever going 
to build that Little Dream House, with- 




out a trunk full of moolah? You think 
the carpenters are going to work free? 
Or the plumbers? Or the architects? 
Not those lads. They’ve been around. 
They’re no dopes. 

And how are you going to do that 
world-traveling you’ve always wanted 
to do? Maybe you think you can stoke 




your way across, or scrub decks. Well, 
that’s no good. I’ve tried it. It inter- 
feres with shipboard romances. 

So — you’d better keep on saving. 

Obviously the best way is by con-' 
tinuing to buy U. S. Savings Bonds — 
through the Payroll Plan. 




They’re safe and sound. And you get 
four bucks back for every three you 
put in! 



SAVE we ^ WAY... BUY YOU^ BONDS WROUGH PAYROLL SAVINGS 



Contributed by this magazine in co-operation 
with the Magazine Publishers of America as a public service. 







CONTENTS 

MAY, 1947 VOL. XXXIX, NO. 3 

SERIAL 

FUKy. hv Lawrence O’DonneU S 

NOVELETTES 

TINY AND THE MONSTER, 

bv Theodore Sturgeon 00 



E FOR EFFORT, bg T. L. Shared IIB 

SHORT STORIES 

JESTING PILOT, bg 'Lewie Padgett 70 



THE JOURNEY AND THE GOAL, bg Chan Davis 09 



ARTICLE 

PSEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND, by Willy Ley 90 



READERS’ DEPARTMENTS 



THE EDITOR’S PAGE 4 

IN TIME? TO COME 40 

BRASS TACKS 116 



Udito, 

.TOHN W. CAlfPBBLL, JR. 



COVER BY ROGERS 

Illustrations by Cartier, Orban and TIedeman 




The editorial contenta bare not been published before, are protected by 
copyright and cannot be reprinted without publishers’ permission. All stories 
Ir this magazine are Action. No actual persons are designated by name or 
character. Any similarity Is coincidental. 

Monthly publication Lssued by Street & Smith Publications, Incorporated, 
122 East 42nd Street. New York 17, N, Y. Allen L. Grammer, President; 
(lerald H. Smith, Exec. Vice President and Treasurer; Henry W. Ralston, Vice 
President and Secretary. Copyright, 1947, In U. S. A. and Great Britain by 
Street I Smith Publications, inc. Reentered as Second-class Matter, February 
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$2.50 ptr Year In U. S. A. Printed la the U. 8. A. 25e per Cepy 



NEXT ISSUE ON SALE MAY 20. 1047 



AST— IS 




DIMINISHING CRESCENDO 



The atomic piles are at work; atomic 
engineers are at work designing piles to 
produce power and plutonium instead of 
plutonium alone. And Hans Bethe, the 
Manhattan Project physicist who de- 
scribed — mathematically — what an atomic 
bomb explosion would look like before 
Alamagordo says “We are not real nu- 
clear physicists ; we are just nuclear engi- 
neers.” To date, the release of energy 
from the super-heavy nuclei is strictly an 
engineering proposition — a rule of thumb, 
trial-and-error business. In the early days 
of electrical engineering, it was perfectly 
and strictly true that the engineers didn’t 
know what it was they were working 
with, but they knew how to make it do 
certain things. As of 1890, that was the 
situation. We had electric lights, tele- 
phones, electric motors, generators, mag- 
nets, telegraphs — a host of gadgets. But 
no one had any idea what electricity was. 

Obviously, if you don’t know what the 
force you’re working with actually is, you 
can’t know what it can do — you can only 
know some of the things it will do. Not 
knowing of electrons, or electron flow, the 
best engineer couldn’t design an electron 
microscope, a triode amplifier tube, or a 
television image orthicon. The General 
Electric engineers who first made trans- 
formers didn’t know just what they were 
making; the General Electric engineers 
who designed and built the 100,000,000 
volt betatron knew they were making a 
transformer with a vacuum-tube second- 
ary using orbital rotation of the electrons 
instead of turns of copper wire. That took 
electronic physics, not just engineering. 

One U-235 nucleus plus one neutron 
yields two fission products plus two or 
more new neutrons — a simple engineering 
equation. But it’s not nuclear physics. No 
more than two hydrogens plus one oxy- 
gen yields one water molecule, which is 

s 



sound engineering but doesn’t attempt to 
define why it happens. 

A bit over a century ago, John Dalton 
reduced the atomic theory to engineering 
operation ; with the atomic theory, a sys- 
tem of chemical notation and chemical 
mathematics became possible. Progress 
could be made. And the chemists dropped 
out of the atomic research story; they 
knew all they needed — they thought! 

Democritus’ idea of the atom — the un- 
cuttable unit of matter — was what we now 
call a molecule. Dalton’s work split the 
molecule into structure, and gave us the 
modern concept of the atom as the indi- 
visible unit. 

The physicists of the last decade of thd 
Nineteenth Century broke off electrons; 
with the aid of natural radioactives in the 
first decade of the Twentieth Century, 
they derived the general outline of atomic 
structure. By 1933, the atom was com- 
posed of neutrons, protons, electrons and 
positrons. The story of the atom and its 
structure was, seemingly, about solved. 

But in ca'rbon-11, a proton emits a pos- 
itron, and become a neutron, changing the 
unstable C-11 into stable boron — B-11. In 
C-14, a neutron emits an electron, chang- 
ing itself into a proton, and the C-14 be- 
comes stable nitrogen- 14. Evidently, we 
have reached a new level of structure; 
the proton and the neutron are not, obvi- 
ously, the elementary particles we thought 
them ; they, too, have structure. 

The atomic engineers work with pile 
design. The atomic physicists have left 
the piles, though ; some are working with 
pre-war cyclotrons, or newly completed 
pre-war designed cyclotrons. But some 
are working with new designs. Linear 
accelerators and synchotrons and super- 
super cyclotrons. It takes from 50,000 to 
50,000,000 volt energies to crack a nucleus 
for study. Even then, studying nuclear 



ASTOUXDIMG SCIENCK-FICTION 



structure becomes sonictliing of the sort 
of job you’d have if you studied watch 
design by cracking watches with ten- 
pound mauls and inspecting the pieces. 

The nucleons — the neutrons and pro- 
tons — are far tougher than the nucleus 
of an atom. That’s expectable. You can 
crack a water molecule with a 1.5 volt 
dry cell — but it takes millions of volts to 
crack the oxygen atom you get out. The 
parts that come from the crackea oxygen 
atom, though, take not millions, but bil- 
lion-volt energies. The new nuclear phys- 
ics heavy ordnance is designed to produce 
particle energies in the range of 500,000,- 
000 to 1,500,000,000 volts. 

’When you rearrange hydrogen and oxy- 
gen atoms to make water, energy is re- 
leased. When uranium nuclei and neu- 
trons arc rearranged, enormously greater 
energy is released. It’s a fair bet that 
when you rearrange the structure of a 
proton or neutron, all the energy will be 
released. And that energy won’t have to 
be derived from two elements in the Earth 
— thorium and uranium. It can be de- 
rived from any matter whatsoever. 

The present probabilities appear to be 
that the engineers will continue to work 
with the atomic piles, gaining highly valu- 
able information — and the physicists will 
work with their super-high energy de- 
vices, gaining immensely valuable basic 
understanding. Just as the knowledge of 
electrons made the fuller use of electrical 
energy possible, so a fuller understanding 
of nucleonic structure will, almost cer- 
tainly, make the fuller use of atomic en- 
ergy possible. 

Somewhere inside the nucleon is the 
secret of gravity, of inertia, and of the 
strange force called "binding energy” or 
“ejfthange forces” — forces so titanic that, 
when they slip very slightly, and allow a 
uranium nucleus to rearrange itself into 
two new nuclei, the inconceivable violence 
of the atomic bomb results. 

The atomic physicists — if the atomic 



politicians permit the continued existence 
of our culture — should, within the next 
five years, begin to get some glimpses of 
the structure of the nucleon. These first 
glimpses will be of immense aid in re- 
designing atomic energy devices, and lead 
to entirely new concepts of atomic energy 
release. (The nuclear physicist, buried in 
the morass of technical problems, is usu- 
ally overconservative in his estimates of 
what he and his brother workers can ac- 
complish in a given period of time. He 
is so keenly and painfully aware of the 
difficulties he tends to underestimate the 
triumphs. Nuclear physicists will, almost 
certainly, object to that five-year estimate. 
I do not claim that the new coficepts will 
be applied and working within five years ; 
only that the new concepts will be turned 
over to the engineers by that time.) 

Since Research is a self-accelerating 
phenomenon, fifteen years time may see 
the first efforts at harnessing nucleonic 
as distinct from nuclear energy. In 1932 
the first cyclotron was in operation; in 
1942 the first atomic pile was working. 

United Nations control and inspection 
may work to restrain atomic weapons; 
the mining and refining of uranium and 
thorium are large-scale enterprises. But 
the whole concept of world government, 
and world, rather than national, allegiance 
better be well established before the first 
nucleonic energy device goes into opera- 
tion. Water and air can’t be inspected 
and controlled. 

And my hunch is that "It Is Later 
Than You Think.” Considerably so. The 
smaller they are, the harder they f^l — 
and the harder they are to regulate, the 
more common their occurrence, the more 
horrific their power. 

And, concomitantly, the more miracu- 
lous the potentialities. 

Only knowledge of electrons could pro- 
duce radar. No one Can even guess what 
powers lie inherent in nucleonic physics. 

The Editou. 



DIMINISHING CRESCENDO 



r> 




t*art One of Three. A new novel of the under- 
Hea civilization of Venus — an undersea cixnli- 
zation that couldn’t make up its mind to crawl 
out of the comfortable, but throttling, shells, 
the great Keeps. A sequel to “Clash By Night.” 



BY 



FURY 

LAWRENCE O’DONNELL 



INTRODUCTION 

It was white night upon Earth and 
twilight’s dawn on Venus. 

AU men knew of the shining darkness 
that had turned Earth into a star in the 
clouded skies. Few men understood that 
on Venus dawn had merged imperceptibly 
into dusk, in an era that never knew 
noon. For as the slow twilight drew on, 
the undersea lights flamed brighter and 
brighter, turning tjie great Keeps into 
enchanted citadels beneath the shallow sea. 

Seven hundred years ago those lights 
were brightest. Six hundred years had 

8 



Illustrated by Orban 

passed since the destruction of Earth. It 
was the Twenty-seventh Century. 

Time had slowed now. In the begin- 
ning it had moved much faster. There 
was much to be done, and the advanced 
technologies of the period had a nearly 
impossible task to fulfill. Venus was un- 
inliabitable. But men had to live on 
Venus. 

On Earth the Jurassic had passed be- 
fore humans evolved into a reasoning race. 
Man is both tough and fragile. How 
fragile will be understood when a vol- 
cano erupts or the earth shakes. How 
tough will be understood when you know 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



that colonics existed for as long as two 
months on the Venusian continents. 

Man never knew the fury of the Juras- 
sic — on Earth. On Venus it was worse. 
When you pull a weed from the hydro- 
ponic tanks, you may tlrink of the cycads 
of a forgotten age ; when you see a small, 
darting lizard, you may remember that 
giants once walked the earth in this guise. 
And Venus was alien land. Its ecolog>' 
paralleled, but was not identical, with the 
ecology of Earth. 

Man had no weapons to conquer the 
Venus lands. His weapons were cither 
too weak or too potent. He could destroy 
utterly, or he could wound lightly, but 
be could not live on the surface of Venus. 
He was faced with an antagonist no man 
had ever known, because the equivalent 
had perished from Earth before mar- 
supials changed to true mammals. 

He faced fury. 

And he fled. 

There was safety of a sort undersea. 
Science had perfected interplanetary 
travel and bad destroyed Earth; science 
could build artificial environments on the 
ocean bottom. The impervium domes 
were built. Beneath them the cities began 
to rise. 

The cities were completed. 

As soon as that happened, dawn on 
Venus changed to twilight. Man had re- 
turned to the sea from which he sprang. 
The race had returned to the racial womb. 

Despair thy charm; 
And let the angel whom thou still 

hast serv’d 

Tell thee, Macduff zvas from his 

mother’s zvomb 
Untimely ripp’d. 

— Shakespeare 

Sam Harker’s birth was a double 
prophecy. It showed what was hap- 
pening to the great Keeps where 
civilization’s lights still burned, and 
it foreshadowed Sam’s life in those 
underwater fortresses and out of 
them. His mother Bessi was a frag- 



ile, pretty woman who should have 
known better tlran to have a child. 
She was narrow-hipped and tiny. 
Sam tore the life out of her before 
the emergency Caesarean released 
him into a wbrld that he had to 
smash before it could smash him. 

That was why Blaze Marker hated 
his son with such a blind, vicious 
hatred. Blaze could never think of 
of the boy without remembering 
what had happened that night. He 
could never hear Sam’s voice with- 
out hearing Bessi’s thin, frightened 
screams. The caudal anesthesia 
hadn’t helped much, because Bessi 
was psychologically as well as phys- 
ically unfit for motherhood. And 
Blaze never saw Sam’s red hair with- 
out thinking of blood. 

Blaze and Bessi — it was a Romeo 
and Juliet story with a happy end- 
ing, up to the time Sam was con- 
ceived. They were casual, purpose- 
less hedonists. In the Keeps you had 
to choose. You could either find a 
drive, an incentive — be one of the 
technicians or artists — or you could 
drift. The technologies made a broad 
field, everything from thalassopoli- 
tics to the rigidly limited nuclear 
physics. But drifting was easy, if 
you could afford it. Even if you 
couldn’t, lotus-eating was cheap in 
the Keeps. You simply didn’t go in 
for the expensive pleasures like the 
Olympus rooms and the arenas. 

Still, Blaze and Bessi could afford 
the best. Their idyll could make a 
saga of hedonism. And it seemed 
that it would have a happy ending, 
for in the Keeps it wasn’t the indi- 
vidual who paid. It was the race 
that was paying. 



FURY 



7 



After Bessi died, Blaze had noth- 
ing left except hatred. 

These were the generations of 
Harker : 

Geoffrey begat Raoul ; Raoul begat 
Zachariah; Zachariah begat Blaze; 
and Blaze begat Sam. 

Blaze relaxed in the cushioned seat 
and looked at his great-great-grand- 
father. 

“^ou can go to the devil,” he said. 
“All of you.” 

Geoffrey was a tall, muscular, 
blond man with curiously large ears 
and feet. He said, “You talk like 
that because you’re young, that’s all. 
How old are you now ? Not twenty !” 

“It’s my affair,” Blaze said. 

“I’ll be two hundred in another 
twenty years,” Geoffrey said. “I had 
sense enough to w'ait till I was past 
fifty before fathering a son. I had 
sense enough not to use my common- 
law wife for breeding. Why blame 
the child ?” 

Blaze stubbornly looked at his 
fingers. 

His father Zachariah, who had 
been glaring silently, sprang up and 
snapped, “He’s psychotic ! Where he 
belongs is in a psych-hospital. Tliey’d 
get the truth out of him!” 

Blaze smiled. “I took precautions, 
Father,” he said mildly. “I took a 
number of tests and exams before I 
came here today. Administration’s 
aproved my I.Q. and my sanity. I’m 
thoroughly compos mentis. Legally, 
too. There's nothing any of you can 
do, and you know it.” 

“Even a two-week-old child has 
his civil rights,” said Raoul, who was 
thin, dark, elegantly tailored in soft 



celoflex, and seemed wryly amused 
by the entire scene. “But you’ve been 
Careful not to 'admit anything, eh, 
Blaze?” 

“Very careful.” 

Geoffrey hunched his buffalo 
shoulders forward, met Blaze’s eyes 
with his own cool blue ones, and said, 
“Where’s the boy ?” 

“I don’t know,” 

Zachariah said furiously, “My 
grandson — we’ll find him! Be sure 
of that! If he’s in Delaware Keep 
we’ll find him — or if he’s on Venus !” 

“Exactly,” Raoul agreed. “The 
Harkers are rather powerful. Blaze. 
You should know that. That’s why 
you’ve been allowed to do exactly as 
you wanted all your life. But that’s 
stopping now.” 

“I don’t think it is stoping,” Blaze 
said. “I’ve a great deal of money of 
my own. As for your finding . . . 
him . . . have you thought that it 
might be difficult ?” 

"We’re a powerful family,” Geof- 
frey said steadily. 

“So we are,” Blaze said. “But 
what if you can’t recognize the boy 
when you find him ?” 

He smiled. 

The first thing they did was to give 
him a depilatory treatment. Blaze 
couldn’t endure the possibility that 
dyed hair would grow back red. The 
baby’s scanty growth of auburn fuzz 
was removed. It would never grow 
again. 

A culture catering to hedonism has 
its perversions of science. And Blaze 
could pay well. More than one tech- 
nician had been wrecked by pleasure- 
addiction ; such men were usually ca- 



s 



ASTOnNDING SCIEXCK-FICTION 



pable — when they wei'e sober. But 
it was a woman Blaze found, finally, 
and she w'as capable only when alive. 
She lived when she was wearing the 
Happy Cloak. She wouldn’t live 
long: Happy Cloak addicts lasted 
about two years, on the average. The 
thing was a biological adaptation of 
an organism found in the Venusian 
seas. It had been illegally devel- 
oped, after its potentialities were 
first realized. In its native state, it 
got its prey by touching it. After 
tliat neuro-contact had been estab- 
lished, the prey w'as quite satisfied to 
be ingested. 

It was a beautiful garment, a liv- 
ing white like the white of a pearl, 
shivering softly with rippling lights, 
stirring w’ith a terrible, ecstatic move- 
ment of its own as the lethal symbi- 
osis was established. It was beauti- 
ful as the woman technician wore it, 
as she moved about the bright, quiet 
room in a tranced concentration upon 
the task that would pay her enough 
to insure her death within two years. 
She was very capable. She knew en- 
docrinology. When she had finished, 
Sam Marker had forever lost his her- 
itage. The matrix had been set — or, 
rather, altered from its original pat- 
tern. 

Thalamus, thyroid, pineal — tiny 
lumps of tissue, some already active, 
some waiting till the trigger of ap- 
proaching maturity started the secre- 
tions. The infant was unformed, a 
somewhat larger lump of tissue, with 
cartilage for bones and his soft skull 
imperfectly sutured as yet. 

“Not a monster,” Blaze had said, 
thinking about Bessi all the time. 



“No, nothing extreme. Short, fleshy 
—thick!" 

The bandaged lump of tissue lay 
still on the operating table. Germi- 
cidal lamps focused on the anaesthet- 
ized form. 

The woman, swimming in antici- 
pated ecstasy, managed to touch a 
summoning signal-button. Then she 
lay down quietly on the floor, the 
shining pearly garment caressing 
her. Her tranced eyes looked up, 
flat and empty as mirrors. The man 
who came in gave the Happy Cloak 
a wide berth. He began the neces- 
sary post-operative routine. 

The elder Markers watched Blaze, 
hoping they could find the child 
through his father. But Blaze had 
refined his plan too thoroughly to 
leave such loopholes. In a secret 
place he had Sam’s fingerprints and 
retina-prints, and he knew that 
through those he could locate his son 
at any time. He was in no hurry. 
What would happen would happen. 
It was inevitable — now. Given the 
basic ingredients, and the stable en- 
vironment, there was no hojie at all 
for Sam Marker. 

Blaze set an alarm clock in his 
mind, an alarm that would not ring 
for many years. Meanwhile, having 
faced reality for the first time in his 
life, he did his utmost to forget it 
again. He never forget Bessi, though 
he tried. He plunged back into the 
bright, euphoric spin of hedonism in 
the Keeps. 

The early years merged into the 
unremembered past. Time moved 
more slowly for him then. Days and 



FUKV 






hours dragged. The man and wonran 
he knew as father and mother had 
nothing in common with him, even 
then. For the operation had not al- 
tered his mind; his intelligence, his 
ingenuity, he had inherited from 
half-mutant ancestors. Though the 
mutation was merely one of longev- 
ity, that trait had made it possible 
for the Markers to rise to dominance 
on Venus. They were not the only 
long-lived ones, by any means ; there 
were a few hundred others who had 
a life-expectancy of from two to 
seven hundred years, depending on 
various complicated factors. But the 
strain bred true. It was easy to iden- 
tify them. 

There was a carnival season once, 
he remembered, and his foster par- 
ents awkwardly donned finery and 
went to mingle with the rest. He was 
old enough to be a reasoning animal 
by then. He had already seen glam- 
our from a distance, but he had never 
seen it in operation. 

Carnival was a respected custom. 
All Delaware Keep was shining. Col- 
ored perfumes hung like a haze above 
the moving Ways, clinging to the 
merrymakers as they passed. It was 
a time when all classes mingled. 

Technically there were no lower 
classes. Actually — 

He saw a woman — the loveliest 
W'oman he had ever seen. Her gown 
was blue. That does not describe its 
color in the least. It was a deep, 
rich, different blue, so velvety and 
smooth that the boy ached to touch 
it. He was too young to understand 
the subtlety of the gown’s cut, its 
sharp, clean lines, the way it en- 
hanced the w'oman’s face and her 

10 



corn-yellow liair. He saw her from 
a distance and was filled with a vio- 
lent need to know more about her. 

His foster mother could not tell 
him what he wanted. 

“That’s Kedre Walton. She must 
be two, three hundred years old by 
now.’’ 

“Yes.” Years meant nothing. “But 
who 15 she ?” 

“Oh — she runs a lot of things.” 

"This is a farewell party, my 
dear,” she said. 

"So soon?” 

“Sixty years — hasn’t it been?” 

“Kedre, Kedre — sometimes I wish 
our lives weren’t so long.” 

She smiled at him. “Then we’d 
never have met. We immortals grav- 
itate to the same level — so we do 
meet.” 

Old Zachariah Marker reached for 
her hand. Beneath their terrace the 
Keep glittered with carnival. 

“It’s always new,” he said. 

“It wouldn’t be, though, if we’d 
stayed together that first time. Imag- 
ine being bound together indissolubly 
for hundreds of years !” 

Zachariah gave her a shrewd, ques- 
tioning stare. 

“A matter of proportion, proba- 
bly,” he said. “Immortals shouldn’t 
live in the Keeps. The restrictions 
... the older you grow, the more 
you’ve got to expand.” 

“Well — I am expanding.” 

“Limited by the Keeps. The young 
men and the short-lived ones don’t 
see the walls around them. We old 
ones do. We need more room. 
Kedre, I’m growing afraid. We’re 
reaching our limits.” 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



“Are uc?" 

“Coming close to them — we Im- 
mortals. I’m afraid of intellectual 
death. What’s the use of longevity 
if you’re not able to use your skills 
and powers as you gain them ? We’re 
beginning to turn inward.” 

“Well — what then? Inter- 
planetary ?” 

“Outposts, perhaps. But on Mars 
we’d need Keeps, too. And on most 
of the other planets. I’m thinking 
of interstellar.” 

“It’s impossible.” 

“It was impossible when man 
came to Venus. It's theoretically 
possible now, Kedre. But not prac- 
tically so. There’s no . . . no sym- 
bolic launching-platform. No inter- 
stellar ship could be built or launched 
from an undersea Keep. I’m speak- 
ing symbolically.” 

“My dear,” she said, “we have all 
the time in the world. We’ll discuss 
this again in . . . oh, fifty years, 
perhaps.” 

“And I won’t see you till then ?” 
“Of course you’ll see me, Zacha- 
riah. But no more than that. It’s 
time we took our vacation. Then, 
when we come together again — ” 
She rose. They kissed. That, too, 
was symbolic. Both of them felt the 
ardor fading into gray ash — and, be- 
cause they were in love, they were 
wise enough and patient enough to 
wait till the fire could be rekindled 
again. 

So far the plan had been 
successful. 

After fifty years had passed they 
would be lovers again. 

Sam Harker Stared at the gaunt 
gray-faced man moving purpose fully 



through the throng. He was wear- 
ing cheerful celoflex too, but nothing 
could disguise the fact that he was 
not a Keep man. He had been sun- 
burned once, so deeply that centuries 
undersea had not bleached him of 
that deep tan. His mouth was set 
in a habitual sneering grin. 

“Who’s that ?” 

“What? Where? Oh, I don't 
know. Don’t bother me.” 

He hated the compromise that had 
made him don celoflex. But his old 
uniform would have been far too 
conspicuous. Cold, cruel-mouthed, 
suffering, he let the Way carry him 
past the enormous globe of the 
Earth, draped in a black plastic pall, 
that served in every Keep as a re- 
minder of mankind’s greatest 
achievement. He went to a walled 
garden and handed in an identifica- 
tion disk at a barred window. Pres- 
ently he was admitted to the temple. 

So this was the Temple of Truth! 

It was impressive. He had respect 
for technicians — logistics, logicians 
. . . not logistics, that was behind 
him now. A priest took him into an 
inner chamber and showed him a 
chair. 

“You’re Robin Hale?” 

“Right.” 

“Well — you’ve collated and given 
us all the data we need. But there 
must be a few clarifying questions. 
The Logician will ask them himself.” 

He went away. Downstairs, in the 
hydroponic gardens, a tall, thin, 
bony- faced man was pottering about 
cheerfull. 

“The Logician is needed. Robin 
Hale’s waiting.” 



FURY 



11 



“Ah, rats,” said the tall, thin man, 
setting down a spray and scratching 
his long jaw. “Nothing I can tell 
the poor fella. He’s sunk.” 

“Sir!” 

“Take it easy. I’ll talk to him. Go 
away and relax. Got his papers 
ready ?” 

“Yes, sir.” 

“O.K. I’ll be along. Don’t rush 
me.” Muttering, the Logician sham- 
bled toward a lift. Presently he was 
in the control room, watching, 
through a visor, the gaunt sunburned 
man sitting uncomfortably on his 
chair. 

“Robin Hale,” he said, in a new, 
deeper voice. 

Hale automatically stiffened. 

1 es. 

“You are an Immortal. That means 
you have a life-expectancy of up to 
seven hundred years. But you have 
no job. Is that right ?” 

“That’s right.” 

“What happened to your job?” 

“What happened to the Free 
Companies ?” 

. . . They died. They passed, when 
the Keeps unified under one govern- 
ernment, and the token wars between 
them became unnecessary. In those 
days, the Free Companions had 
been the warriors, hired mercenaries 
paid to fight battles the Keeps dared 
not fight themselves, for fear of 
perishing. 

The Logician said, “Not many 
Free Companions were Immortals. 
It’s been a long time since there was 
a Free Company. You’ve outlived 
vour job. Hale.” 

“I know.” 



“Do you want me to find a job 
for you ?” 

“I can’t,” Hale said bitterly. "1 
can’t find one, and I can’t face the 
prospect of liundreds of years — do- 
ing nothing. Just enjoying myself. 
I’m not a hedonist.” 

“I can tell you what to do very 
easily,” the Logician said. “Die.” 
There was silence. 

The Logician went on: “I can’t 
tell you how to do it quite so easily. 
You’re a fighter. You’ll want to die 
fighting for your life. And, prefer- 
ably, fighting for something you be- 
lieve.” He paused. When he spoke 
again, his voice had changed. 

“Wait a minute,” he said. “I’m 
coming out there. Hang on.” 

And a moment later his thin, tall 
form shambled from behind a cur- 
tain in the wall. Hale jumped to 
his feet, staring at the scarecrow fig- 
ure confronting him. The Logician 
waved him back to his seat. 

“Lucky I’m the boss,” he said. 
“Those priests of mine wouldn’t 
stand for this if they had a thing to 
say about it. But what could they 
do without me? I’m the Logician. 
Sit down.” He pulled up a seat oppo- 
site, took an odd-looking object from 
his pocket — it was a pipe — and 
stuffed it with tobacco. 

“Grow it and cure it myself,” he 
said. “Look, Hale. This phony stuff 
is O.K. for the Keeps, but I don’t 
see the point of handing you a line.” 
Hale was staring. “But ... the 
Temple . . . this is the Temple of 
Truth? You mean it’s all — ” 
“Phony ? Nope. It’s on the level. 
Trouble is, the truth don’t always 



la 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 




come out dignified. Those old stat- 
ues of Truth — naked, she was. Well, 
she had the figger for it. But look 
at me, now. I’d be a sight. There 
was a time when we played it 
straight ; it didn't work. People just 
thought I was giving an opinion. 
Fair enough ; I look like an ordinary 
guy. But I’m not. I’m a trick mu- 
tant. Come full circle. We went 
around through Plato and Aristotle 
and Bacon and Korzybski and the 
truth-machines — and end up right 
where we started, the best method 
in the world to use logic on human 



problems. I know the answers. The 
right ones.” 

Hale found it difficult to under- 
stand. “But . . . you can’t be infal- 
lible . . . don’t you use any system ?” 
“Tried the systems,” the Logician 
said. “Lots of four-bit words. Boils 
down to one thing. Horse sense.” 
Hale blinked. 

The Logician kindled his pipe. 
“I’m over a thousand years old,” he 
said. “Kind of hard to believe, 1 
know. But, I told you I was a trick 
mutant. Son, I was born on Earth. 
I can remember the atomic wars. 



PURV 



18 



Not the first ones — that was how I 
come to be born, my parents got in 
the way of some secondary radia- 
tions. I’m about as close to a real 
Immortal as they come. But my main 
talent — do you remember reading 
about Ben the Prophet. No? Well, 
he was only one of a lot of prophets, 
in those days. Plenty of people 
guessed what was coming. Didn’t 
take much logic. I was Ben the 
Prophet. Lucky some of the right 
people listened and started coloniz- 
ing Venus. I came along. Time the 
Earth blew up, I was right here be- 
ing studied. Some technicians found 
out my brain was a little queer. 
There was a new sense in it, instinct, 
or whatever — nobody’s ever found 
out exactly what: it is. But it’s the 
same thing that made the thinking- 
machines give the right answers — 
when they did ! Brother, I just can’t 
help giving the right answers !” 

“You’re a thousand years old?” 
Hale asked, fastening on the single 
point. 

• “Nigh. I’ve seen ’em come and 
go. I’ve seen how I could get to 
rule the whole roost, if I wanted to. 
But preserve me from that! I can 
see most of the answers to that, and 
I don’t like any of ’em. I just sit 
here in the Temple of Truth and an- 
swer questions.” 

Hale said blankly, “We’ve always 
thought . . . there was a machine — ” 

“Sure, I know. Funny people will 
believe what a machine tells ’em, 
where they won’t believe a fella like 
themselves. Or maybe it isn’t funny 
at all. Look, son — no matter how 
you cut it, I know the answers. I 
turn over the information in my 

14 



head, and pretty soon I see what they 
add up to. Common sense is all. Only 
requirement is that I’ve got to know , 
all about you and your problem.” 
“Then you can read the future.” 
“Too many variables,” the Logi- 
cian said. “By the way, I hope you 
won’t shoot off your mouth about 
me. The priests won’t like it. Every 
time I show myself to some client 
and come off my high horse, they 
raise the temple roof. Not that it 
matters. You can talk if you want; 
nobody’d believe the infallible ora- 
cle’s anything but a super-machine.” 
He grinned cheerfully. “Main thing 
is, son, I got an idea. I told you I 
add up the numbers and get the an- 
swer. Well, sometimes I get more 
than one answer. Why don’t you go 
landside ?” 

“Whatr 

“Why not?” the Logician said. 
“You’re pretty tough. Course you 
may get killed. Probably will, I’ll 
say. But you’ll go down fighting. 
Not much fighting you can do in the 
Keeps, for anything you believe in. 
There’s some other people feel the 
way you do. A few Free Compan- 
ions, I think — Immortals too. Look 
them up. Go landside.” 

Hale said, “It’s impossible.” 

“The Companies had their forts, 
didn’t they ?” 

“It took gangs of technicians to 
keep the jungle out. And the ani- 
mals. We had to keep waging a con- 
tinual war against landside. Besides, 
the forts — there isn’t much left of 
them now.” 

“Pick one out and rebuild it.” 

“But — then what?” 

“Maybe you can be top man,” the 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



Logician said quietly. “IMaj’be you 
can get to be top man — on Venus.” 

The silence drew on and on. Hale’s 
face changed. 

“Good enough,” the Logician said, 
getting up. He put out his hand. 
“My name’s Ben Crowell, by the 
way. Come see me if you run into 
trouble. Or I might even drop in to 
see you. If I do, don’t let on I’m 
the great brain.” He winked. 

He shambled out, sucking at his 
pipe. 

Life in the Keeps was ver}^ much 
like a game of chess. In the barn- 
yard, among fowls, social precedence 
is measured by length of tenancy. 
Extension in time is wealth. Pawns 
have a low life-expectancy; knights 
and bishops and castles have more. 
Socially, there was a three-dimen- 
sional democracy and a temporal 
autocracy. There was a reason why 
the long-lived Biblical patriarchs 
achieved power. They could hold 
power. 

In the Keeps, the Immortals simply 
knew more than the non-Immortals. 
Psychologically a curious displace- 
ment became evident. Immortals 
weren’t worshiped as gods in those 
practical days, but there was definite 
displacement. Parents have one fac- 
ulty a child. cannot have: maturity. 
The plus factor. Experience. Age. 

So there was displacement. Un- 
consciously the short-lived peoples of 
the Keeps began to look with depend- 
ence upon the Immortals. They knew 
more, of course. And, too, they were 
older. 

Let George do it. 

Besides, it is a regrettably human 



trait to disclaim unpleasant responsi- 
bilities. For centuries the trend had 
been away from individualism. So- 
cial responsibility had been carried to 
the point where everyone, theoreti- 
cally, was his brother’s keeper. 

Eventually they all formed a circle 
and collapsed gracefully into one an- 
other’s arms. 

The Immortals, who knew what 
long, empty centuries were ahead of 
them, took pains to insure that those 
centuries would not be so empty. 
They learned. They studied. They 
had plenty of time. 

As they gained in knowledge and 
experience, they began to take the 
responsibilities easily delegated to 
them by-die collapsing multitudes. 

It was a stable enough culture — 
for a moribund race. 

He was always getting into 
mischief. 

Anything new was fascinating to 
him. The Harker chromosomes took 
care of that. His name, though, was 
Sam Reed. 

He kept fighting the invisible bars 
that he knew prisoned him. There 
were fourscore and ten of them. 
Something in his mind, something 
illogical and inherited, kept rebelling, 
seeking expression. What can you 
do in ninety years? 

Once he tried to get a job in the 
great hydroponic gardens. His blunt, 
coarse face, his bald head, his preco- 
cious mind — these made it possible 
for him to lie convincingly about his 
age. He managed it for a whilfc, till 
his curiosity got the better of him, 
and he began experimenting with 
botanical forced cultures. Since he 



FURY 



1 .% 



knew nothing about it, he spoiled a 
good-sized crop. 

Before that, though, he had dis- 
covered a blue flower in one of the 
tanks, and it reminded him of the 
woman he had seen at carnival. Her 
gown had been exactly the same 
color. He asked one ©f the attend- 
ants about it. 

“Blasted weeds,” the man said. 
"Can’t keep ’em out of the tanks. 
Hundreds of years, and they still 
show up. We don’t have much trou- 
ble with these, though. It’s the crab 
grass that’s worst.” He pulled up 
the weed and tossed it aside. Sam 
rescued it and asked more questions 
later. It was, he learned, a violet. 
The unobtrusive, pretty little plant 
was a far cry from the glamqfous 
hybrid flowers grown in other sec- 
tions of Hydroponics. He kept it 
till it broke into dust. He kept its 
memory after that, as he kept the 
memory of the woman in the violet- 
blue gown. 

One day he ran away to Canada 
Keep, far across the Sea of Shal- 
lows. He had never been outside a 
Keep before, and was fascinated as 
the great, transparent globe drove 
upward through the bubbling water. 
He went with a man whom he had 
bribed — with stolen money — to pre- 
tend to be his father. But after he 
reached Canada Keep he never saw 
the man again. 

He was ingenious at twelve. He 
worked out various ways to earn a 
living. But none satisfied him. They 
werewll too dull. Blaze Harker had 
known what he was doing when he 
had left the boy’s mind untouched in 
a stunted, warped body. 

ts 



It was warped only by the aesthetic 
standards of the time. The kng- 
limbed, tall Immortals had set the 
standard of beauty. There came to 
be a stigma of ugliness attached to 
the stocky, blunt- featured, thick- 
boned short-lived ones. 

There was a tough, violent seed of 
un fulfillment within Sam. It drove 
him. It couldn’t develop normally, 
for it was seed of the Immortals, and 
he obviously was no Immortal. He 
simply could not qualify for work 
that might take training of a hun- 
dred years or more. Even fifty years 
training — ! 

He did it the hard way, and the 
inevitable way. He got his mentor, 
his Chiron-Fagin, after he met the 
Slider. 

The Slider was a fat, wicked old 
man without any name. He had 
bushy white hair, a carbuncled red 
nose, and a philosophy of his own. 
He never proffered advice, but he 
gave it when it was asked. 

“People want fun,” he told the 
boy. “Most of ’em. And they don’t 
want to look at a thing that hurts 
their tender feelings. Use your head, 
kid. Thieving’s out. Best to make 
yourself useful to people who’ve got 
power. Now you take Jim Sheffield’s 
gang. Jim caters to thej"ight people. 
Don’t ask questions ; do what you’re 
told — but first get the right connec- 
tions.” 

He sniffled and blinked his watery 
eyes at Sam. 

“I spoke to Jim alx>ut you. Gk» 
see him. Here’s the place.” He 
thrust a plastic disk at the boy. “I 
wouldn’t of got you out of that 



. ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



scrape if I hadn’t seen something in 
you. Go see Jim.” 

He stopped Sam at the door. 

“You’ll get along. Likewise, you 
won’t forget old Slider, eh? Some 
people have. I can make trouble as 
easy as I can do favors.” 

Sam left the fat, malignant old 
man sniffling and chuckling. 

He went to see Jim Sheffield. He 
was fourteen then, strong, short, 
scowling. He found Sheffield stronger 
and larger. Sheffield was seventeen, 
a graduate of the Slider’s twisted 
school, an independent, shrewd busi- 
nessman whose gang was already be- 
coming known. The human factor 
was vital for Keep intrigue. It wasn’t 
merely politics ; the mores of the era 
were as punctilious and complicated 
as the social life of Machiavelli’s 
Italy. The straight thrust of the knife 
was not only illegal but in poor taste. 
Intrigue was the thing. In the con- 
tinually shifting balance of power, 
the man who could outwit an oppo- 
nent, wind him in webs of his own 
spinning, and force him to ruin him- 
self — that was the game. 

Sheffield’s gang free-lanced. Sam 
Reed’s — he didn’t know the name 
Marker except to identify it with one 
of the great Families of his old Keep 
— first job was to go undersea, with 
one more experienced companion, 
and collect some specimens of bluish 
algae, illegal within the Keeps. When 
he got back through the secret lock, 
he was surprised to find the Slider 
waiting, with a portable ray-mech- 
anism already set up. The little room 
had been sealed off. 

The Slider was wearing protective 



armor. His voice came through a 
diaphragm. 

“Stay right there, boys. Catch this.” 
He tossed a spray-gun to Sam. “Now 
spray that plastibulb. It’s sealed, isn’t 
it? Right. Spray it all over — fine. 
Now turn around slowly.” 

“Wait a minute — ” said the other 
boy. 

The Slider sniffled. “Do what I tell 
you or I’ll break your skinny neck,” 
he said conversationally. “Raise your 
arms. Turn slowly, while I use the 
ray on you . , . that's it.” 

Afterward, the three of them met 
Jim Sheffield. Jim was subdued but 
angry. He tried to argue with the 
Slider. 

The Slider sniffled and rumpled 
his white hair. 

“You shut up,” he said. “Too big 
for your boots, you’re getting to be. 
If you’d remember to ask me when 
you get into something new, you’d 
‘save yourself trouble.” He tapped 
the black-painted globe Sam had set 
on the table. “This algae — know 
why it’s forbidden in the Keeps? 
Didn’t your patron tell you to be 
careful when he commissioned you 
to get the stuff?” 

Sheffield’s broad mouth twisted. 
“I was careful !” 

“The stuff’s safe to handle under 
lab conditions,” the Slider said, 
“Only then. It’s a metal-eater. Dis- 
solves metal. Once it’s been treated 
with the right reagents, it’s innocu- 
ous. But raw like this, it could get 
loose and cause a lot of trouble here 
— and it’d be traced back to you, and 
you’d land in Therapy. See? If 
you’d come to me first. I’d have told 
you to have this ultraviolet set up, 



FOB Y 



17 



to burn the daylights out of any algae 
the boys might bring in stuck to their 
suits. Next time I won’t be so easy 
on you. I don’t want to go to Ther- 
apy, Jim.” 

The old man looked innocuous- 
enough, but Sheffield’s rebellious 
stare wavered and fell. With a word 
of agreement he rose, picked up the 
globe and went out, beckoning to the 
other boys. Sam waited for a mo- 
ment. 

The Slider winked at him. 

“‘You make a lot of mistakes when 
you don’t get advice, kid,” he said. 

The.se were only episodes among 
many like them along the course of 
his outward life. Inwardly too he 
was precocious, amoral,, rebellious. 
Above all, rebellious. He rebelled 
agfainst the shortness of life, that 
made learning seem futile to him 
when he thought of the Immortals. 
He rebelled against his own body, 
thick and stocky and plebeian. Here- 
belled obscurely, and without know- 
ing the reasons himself, against all 
that he had irrevocably become in 
that first week of his life. 

There have always been angry men 
in the world. Sometimes the anger, 
like Elijah’s, is the fire of God and 
the man lives in history as a saint 
and a reformer whose anger moved 
mountains to improve the lot of man- 
kind. Sometimes the anger is de- 
structive, and great war-leaders rise 
to devastate whole nations. Angers 
like that find outward expression and 
need not consume their hosts. 

But Sam Reed’s anger was a rage 
against intangibles like time and des- 
tiny and the only target it could find 



to explode against was himself. 
Granted that such anger is not nor- 
mal in a man. But Sam Reed was 
not normal. His father before him 
could not have been normal, or he 
would never have taken such dispro- 
portionate vengeance on his son. A 
flaw somewhere in the Harker blood 
was responsible for the bitter rage in 
which father and son alike lived out 
their days, far separate, raging 
against far different things, but in 
armed rebellion all their lives, both 
of them, against life itself. 

Sam went through many inward 
phases that would have astonished 
the Slider and Jim Sheffield and the 
others with whom he worked in those 
days. Because his mind was more 
complex than theirs, he was able to 
live on many more levels than they, 
and able to conceal it. From the day 
he first discovered the great libraries 
of the Keeps he became a passionate 
reader. He was never an intellectual 
man, and the unrest in him prevented 
him from ever mastering any one 
field of knowledge and so rising 
above his station by the one superi- 
ority he possessed — his mind. 

But he devoured books as fire de- 
vours fuel, as his own discontent de- 
voured himself. He raced through 
whole courses of reading on any sub- 
ject that caught his quick, glancing 
fancy, and emerged with knowledge 
of that subject stored uselessly away 
in a chamber of the uselessly capa- 
cious brain. Sometimes the knowl- 
edge helped him to promote a fraud 
or consun-miate a murder. More 
often it simply lay dormant in the 
mind that had been meant for the 
storage of five hundred years’ ex- 



18 



ASTOUXniXO SCIENCE-FICTION 



pcrience, and was doomed to extinc- 
tion in less than a century. 

One great trouble with Sam Reed 
was that he didn’t know what really 
ailed him. He had long struggles 
with his own conscience, in which he 
tried to rationalize his mind out of 
its own unconscious knowledge of its 
lo-st heritage. For a time he hoped 
to find among books some answer . . . 

In those early days he sought and 
found in them the respite of escapism 
which he later tried in so many other 
forms — drugs among them, a few 
women, much restless shifting from 
Keep to Keep — until he came at last 
to the one great, impossible task 
which was to resolve his destiny and 
which he faced with such violent re- 
luctance. 

For the next decade and a half 
he read, quietly and rapidly, through 
the libraries of whichever Keep he 
found himself in, as a smooth under- 
current to whatever illicit affair he 
might currently be involved with. 
His profound contempt for the peo- 
ple he victimized, directly or indi- 
rectly, was one with the contempt he 
felt for his associates. Sam Reed 
was not in any sense a nice man. 

Even to himself he was unpredict- 
able. He was the victim of his own 
banked fire of self-hatred, and when 
that fire burst forth, Sam Reed’s 
lawlessness took very direct forms. 
His reputation became tricky. No 
one trusted him very far — how could 
they, when he didn’t even trust him- 
self ? — but his hand and his mind 
were so expert that his services were 
in considerable demand among those 
willing to take the chance that their 
careful plans might blow up in 

FURY 



bloody murder if Sam Reed’s temper 
got the better of him. Many were 
willing. Many found him rather 
fascinating. 

For life in the Keeps had leveled 
off to an evenness which is not native 
to the minds of man. In many, many 
people something like an unrecog- 
nized flicker of the rebellion which 
consumed Sam Reed burned rest- 
lessly, coming to the surface in 
odd ways. Psychological projective 
screens took strange forms, such as 
the wave of bloodthirsty ballads 
which was sweeping the Keeps on a 
high tide of popularity when Sam 
was in his formative years. Less 
strange, but as indicative, was the 
fad for near-worship of the old Free- 
Companion days, the good old days 
of man’s last romantic period. 

Deep in human minds lies the in- 
sistence that war is glamorous, al- 
though it never can have been except 
to a select few, and for nearly a 
thousand years now had been wholly 
terrible. Still the tradition clung on 
— perhaps because terror itself is 
perversely fascinating, though most 
of us have to translate it into other 
terms before we can admire it. 

The Free Companions, who had 
been serious, hard-working men op- 
erating a warfare machine, became 
swaggering heroes in the public 
fancy and many a man sighed nos- 
talgically for a day he thought he 
had missed by a period of heart- 
breaking briefness. 

They sang the wailing ballads the 
Free Companions had carried over, 
in changed forms, from the pioneer 
days on Venus, which in turn had 

19 



derived from the unimaginably dif- 
ferent days on Old Earth. But they 
sang them with a difference now. 
Synthetic Free Companions in inac- 
curate costumes performed for sway- 
ing audiences that followed their 
every intonation without guessing 
how wrong they were. 

The emphasis was off, in words 
and rhythm alike. For the Keeps 
were stagnant, and stagnant people 
do not know how to laugh. Their 
humor is subtle and devious, evoking 
the snigger rather than the guffaw. 
Slyness and innuendo was the basis 
of their oblique humor, not laughter. 

For laughter is cruel and open. 
The hour was on its way when men 
would sing again the old bloodthirsty 
ballads as they were meant to be 
sung, and laugh again with the full- 
throated heartiness that comes from 
the need to laugh — at one’s own mis- 
fortunes. To laugh because the only 
alternative is tears — and tears mean 
defeat. Only pioneers laugh in the 
primitive fullness of the sense. No 
one in the Keeps in those days had 
so much as heard real laughter in its 
cruelty and courage, except perhaps 
the very eldest among them, who re- 
membered earlier days. 

Sam Reed along with the rest ac- 
cepted the Free Companions — extinct 
almost as Old Earth’s dinosaurs, and 
for much the same reason— as the 
epitome of glamorous romance. But 
he understood the reasons behind 
that emotional acceptance, and could 
jeer at himself for doing it. It was 
not Free Companionship but free en- 
deavor which, in the last analysis, en- 
chanted them all. 

They didn’t want it, really. It 



would have terrified and repelled 
most of these people who so grace- 
fully collapsed into the arms of any- 
one willing to offer them moral and 
mental support. But nostalgia is 
graceful too, and they indulged them- 
selves in it to the full. 

Sam read of the pioneer days on 
Venus wtih a sort of savage long- 
ing. A man could use. all of himself 
against an adversary like the raven- 
ing planet the newcomers had fought. 
He read of Old Earth with a burn- 
ing no.stalgia for the wider horizons 
it had offered. He hummed the old 
songs over to himself and tried to 
imagine what a free sky must have 
looked like, terrifyingly studded with 
the visible worlds of space. 

His trouble was that his world was 
a simple place, made intricate only 
artificially, for the sake of intricate 
intrigue, so that one couldn’t hurl 
oneself wholeheartedly into conflict 
against a barrier — because the bar- 
rier was artificial and would collapse. 
You had to support it with one hand 
while you battered it with the other. 

The only thing that could have of- 
fered Sam an opponent worthy of 
his efforts was time, the long, com- 
plex stretch of centuries which he 
knew he would never live. So he 
hated men, women, the world, him- 
self. He fought them all indiscrim- 
inately and destructively for lack of 
an opponent he could engage with in 
a constructive fight. 

He fought them for forty years. 

One pattern held true through all 
that time, though he recognized it 
only dimly and without much inter- 
est. Blue was a color that could 



ASTOCKPING SCIENCE-FICTIOX 



touch him as iiolliing else could. He 
rationalized that, in part, by remera- 
Jpering the stories of Old Earth and 
a sky inconceivably colored blue. 

Here water hemmed one in every- 
where. The upper air was heavy 
with moisture, the clouds above it 
hung gravid with moisture and the 
gray seas wltich were a blanket above 
the Keeps seemed scarcely wetter 
titan clouds and air. So the blueness 
of that lost sky was one in his mind 
with the thought of freedom . . . 

But the first girl he took in free- 
marriage was a little dancer from 
one of the Way cafes, who had worn 
a scanty costume of blue feathers 
when he saw her first. She had blue 
eyes, not so blue as the feathers or 
the unforgotten skies of Earth, but 
blue. Sam rented a little apartment 
for them on a back street in Mon- 
tana Keep, and for six months or so 
they bickered no more than most do- 
mestic couples. 

One morning he came in from an 
all-night job with the Sheffield gang 
and smelled something strange the 
moment he pushed the door open. A 
heavy sw^eetness in the air, and a 
sharp, thick, already familiar acrid- 
ness that not many Keep men would 
recognize these effete days. 

The little dancer lay slumped 
against the far wall, already stiffen- 
ing in her slump. Where her face 
had been was a great palely tinted 
blossom whose petals gripped like a 
many-fingered hand, plastering the 
flower tight against her skull. It had 
been a yellow flower, but the veins 
in the petals were bright red now, 
and more red ran down beneath the 
blossom over the girl’s blue dress. 



Beside ber on the floor lay the 
florist’s box, spilling green tissue, in 
which someone bad sent her the 
flower. 

Sam never knew who had done it, 
or why. It might have been some 
eneniy of his, taking revenge for past 
indignities, it might even have been 
one of his friends — he suspected the 
Slider for awhile — afraid of the hold 
the girl was getting over him, to di- 
vert him from profitable business in 
the dark hours. Or it might have 
been one of the girl’s dancing rivals, 
for the bitterest sort of struggle went 
on constantly among people of that 
profession for the too- few jobs that 
were open just now in Montana 
Keep. 

Sam made inquiries, found out 
what he wanted to know and exacted 
dispassionate justice from people 
who may or may not have been guil- 
ty. Sam was not very concerned with 
that. The girl had not been a partic- 
ularly nice girl in any sense, any 
more than Sam was a nice man. She 
had been convenient, and she had 
blue eyes. It was his own reputa- 
tion Sam was upholding when he did 
what he did about her murder. 

After that other girls came and 
went. Sam exchanged the little back- 
■street apartment for a better one in 
a quieter neighborhood. Then he fin- 
ished an exceptionally profitable job 
and forsook girl and apartment for 
almost elegant quarters high up in a 
tower looking out over the central 
Way. He found a pretty blue-eyed 
singer to share it with him. 

By the time our story opens he 
had three apartments in three Keeps, 
one quite expensive, ' one average. 



i’CSY 



31 



and one deliberately clK)sen down 
among the port loading streets in the 
dimmest section of Virginia Keep. 
The occupants matched the apart- 
ments. Sam was an epicure in his 
own way. By now he could afford 
to be. • 

In the expensive apartment he had 
two rooms sacred to his privacy, 
stocked with a growing library of 
books and music, and an elaborate 
selection of liquors and drugs. This 
was not known among his business 
associates. He went here by another 
name and was generally supposed to 
be a commercial traveler from some 
unspecified but distant Keep. It was 
as close as Sam Reed could come to 



the life Sam Harker would have led 
by rights. 

The Queen of Air and Darkness 
Begins to shrill and cry, 

O young man, O my slayer, 

T omorrozv you shall die . . . 

On the first day of the annual Car- 
nival which ushered in the last year 
of Sam Reed’s life, he sat across a 
small, turning table and spoke prac- 
tically of love and money with a girl 
in pink velvet. It must have been 
near noon, for the light filtering down 
through the Sea of Shallows and the 
great dome of the Keep fell at its 
dim maximum upon them. But all 




ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



docks were slopped for the three- 
day Carnival so that no one need 
■Worry about time. 

To anyone not reared from child- 
hood upon such phenomena as a 
merry-go-round cafe, the motion of 
the city around Sam would have been 
sickening. The whole room turned 
slowly to slow music ivithin its trans- 
parent circular walls. The tables 
turned each upon its own axis, car- 
rying a perimeter of chairs with it. 
Behind the girl’s soft cloud of hair 
Sam could see all of the Keep spread- 
ing out and out below them and 
wheeling solemnly in parade past his 
unheeding -vantage point. 

A drift of colored perfume floated 
past them in a long, airy ribbon lifted 
and dropped by the air currents. 
Sam felt tiny spatters of scented 
moisture beading his face as the 
pink fog drifted past. He dispelled 
it with an impatient fanning of the 
hand and narrowed his eyes at the 
girl across from him. 

“Well?” he said. 

The girl smiled and bent her head 
over the tall, narrow, double-horned 
lyre, streaming with colored ribbons, 
which she embraced with one arm as 
she sat there. Her eyes were gentian 
blue, shadowed with lashes so heavy 
she seemed to look up at him through 
them from black eyes. 

“I have another number in a min- 
ute,” she said. “I’ll tell you later.” 

“You’ll tell me now,” Sam de- 
clared. not harshly as he w-ould have 
spoken to most other women, but 
firmly. The expensive apartment, 
high up at the exclusive peak of the 
Keep residential section, was vacant 
just now, and if Sam had his way 



this girl would be the next dw'dler 
there. Perhaps a permanent dweller. 
He was aware of an uneasy stir in 
his mind whenever he thought of 
Rosathe. He didn’t like any woman 
to affect him this deeply. 

Rosathe smiled at him. She had a 
small, soft mouth and a cloud of soft 
dark hair cut short and haloed all 
over her head like a dark mist. There 
was unexpected humor in her face 
sometimes, a rather disconcerting in- 
telligence behind the gentian eyes, 
and she sang in a voice like the pink 
velvet of her gown, a small soft 
plaintive voice that brushed the 
nerves with pleasant tremors. 

Sam was. afraid of her. But be- 
ing Sam Reed, he was reaching for 
this particular nettle. He dealt with 
danger by confronting it, and if 
there was any way of getting this 
velvety creature out of his mind, it 
would be through surfeit, not by try- 
ing to forget her. He proposed to 
surfeit himself, if he could, as soon 
as possible. 

Rosathe plucked one string of the 
lyre with a thoughtful forefinger. 
She said, “I heard something inter- 
esting on the grapevine this morning. 
Jim Sheffield doesn’t like you any 
more. Is it true, Sam ?” 

Sam said without heat. “I asked 
you a question.” 

“I asked you one.” 

“All right, it’s true. I’ll leave you 
a year’s income in my will if Jim gets 
me first-— is that what you’re after?” 
She flushed and twanged the string 
so that it disappeared in violent vi- 
bration. “I could slap you, Sam 
Reed. You know I can earn my own 
money.” 



FURY 



23 



He sighed. She could, which made 
it rather more difficult to argue with 
her. Rosathe was a more than pop- 
ular singer. If she came to him it 
wouldn’t be for the money involved. 
That was another thing that made 
her dangerous to his peace of mind. 

The slow music which had been 
matching the room’s slow turns 
paused. Then a stronger beat rang 
through the air, making all the per- 
fume drifts shiver. Rosathe stood 
up, hoisting the tall, narrow lyre 
against her hip. 

“That’s me,’’ she said. “I’ll think 
it over, Sam. Give me a few days. 
I might be very bad for you.’’ 

“I know you’ll be bad for me. Go 
sing your song. I’ll see you after 
Carnival, but not for an answer. I 
know the answer. You’ll come.’’ 

She laughed and walked away 
from him, sweeping her hand across 
the strings and humming her song as 
she went. Sam sat there watching, 
seeing heads turn and faces light up 
in anticipation. 

But before her song was finished, 
he got up and went out of the turn- 
ing room, hearing behind him the 
velvety little voice diminishing in 
plaintive lament for a fabled Gene- 
vieve. Every note was delicately true 
as she slid up and down the difficult 
flats which gave the old, old song its 
minor wailing. 

“Oh Genevieve, s-iVect Geneincve, 
the days may come, the days may 
go. . . wailed Rosathe, watching 
Sam’s broad red-velvet back out ot 
the room. When she had finished the 
song she went quickly to her dress- 
ing room and flipped the switch of 

24 



the communicator, giving Sheffield’s 
call-signal. 

“Listen, Jim,’’ she said rapidly 
when his dark, scowling face swam 
into the screen. “I was just talking 
to Sam, and . . .’’ 

If Sam could have listened, he 
probably would have killed her then, 
instead of much later. But, of course, 
he didn’t hear. At the moment the 
conversation began, he was walking 
into an important coincidence which 
was a turning point in his life. 

The coincidence was another 
woman in blue. Sauntering down 
the moving Way, she lifted an arm 
and threw the corner of her filmy 
blue robe over her hair like a veil. 
The motion and the color caught 
Sam’s eye, and he stopped so sud- 
denly that men on both sides jolted 
into him, and one turned with a 
growl, ready to make a quarrel out 
of it. Then he got a better glimpse 
of the granite face, long-jawed, with 
lines of strain etched from nose to 
mouth, and for no clear reason 
turned away, giving up the idea. 

Because the image of Rosathe was 
still vivid in his mind, Sam looked at 
the woman with less enthusiasm than 
he might have shown a few days ear- 
lier. But deep in his mind buried 
memories stirred and he stood mo- 
tionless, staring. The breeze of the 
sliding Way rippled the veil above 
her face so that shadows moved in 
her eyes, blue shadows from the blue 
veil in the heavily shadowed blue of 
her eyes. She was very beautiful. 

Sam brushed aside a haze of pink 
carnival perfume, hesitated — which 
was not normal to him — and then 

A.STOtTNDING SCIKNCE-FICTION 



hitched his gilded belt with a ges- 
ture of decision and went forward 
with the long motion of a stride, 
hut his feet falling softly, as was 
his habit. He didn’t know' why the 
woman’s face and her violet-blue 
robe disturbed him. He had forgot- 
ten a great deal since the long-ago 
Carnival when he saw her last 

At Carnival there are no social 
barriers — in theory. Sam w'ould 
have spoken anyhow. He came up 
below her on the sliding street and 
looked unsmilingly into her face. 
On a level she would have been 
taller than he. She was very slen- 
der, very elegant, with a look of 
graceful weariness much cultivated 
in the Keep. Sam could not know 
that it w'as she who had set the style, 
or that with her w'eariness and grace 
were native, not assumed. 

The blue robe w’as wrapped tight 
over a tighter sheath of flexible gold 
that gleamed through the filmy blue. 
Her hair was an extravagant cas- 
cade of blue-black ringlets drawn 
back from her lovely, narrow face 
and gathered through a broad gold 
ring at the crown of her head, so 
that they fell free from the band 
in a rich cascade to her waist. 

With deliberate barbarism her 
ears had been pierced, and she wore 
a hooped gold bell through each lobe. 
It was part of the current fad that 
aped the vitality of barbarism. Next 
season might see a gold ring through 
the nose, and this woman would 
wear one with the same air of ele- 
gant disdain she turned now upon 
Sam Reed. 

He ignored it. He said in a voice 
of flat command, “You can come 



vx ith me now,’’ and he held out his 
crooked arm slioulder-high before 
him, in invitation. 

She tilted her head back' slightly 
and looked at him down her nar- 
row nose. She may have Iteen 
smiling. It was impossible to tell, 
because she had the same full, 
delicately curved mouth so many 
Egyptian portrait heads once had, 
with the smile implicit in the con- 
tour of the lips. If she did smile, 
it was in disdain. The heavy water- 
fall of her ringlets seemed to pull 
her head farther back on the deli- 
cate slender neck, so that she looked 
down on Sam partly in weariness, 
partly in scorn, partly in sheer 
contempt for him as he was. 

She stood for a prolonged mo- 
ment, looking at him down her 
nose, so still the bells in her pierced 
ears did not jingle. 

For Sam, at first .glance merely a 
squat plebeian like the rest of the 
lower classes, at second glance 
offered many contrasts to the 
discerning eye. He had lived nearly 
forty years now with his all- 
devouring anger; if he had come 
to terms with it, it consumed him 
inwardly all the same. The marks 
of that violence were on his face, 
so that even in repose he looked 
like a man straining against heavy 
odds. It gave a thrust and drive 
to his features which went far 
toward redeeming their heavi- 
ness. 

The fact that he had no hair was 
another curious thing. Baldness 
was ordinary enough, but this man 
was so completely hairless that he 
did not seem bald at all. His bare 



1-’UB¥ 



25 



skull had a classical ijuality, and hair 
would look anachronistic now upon 
the well-shaped curve of his head. 
Much harm had been done the in- 
fant of forty years past but in some 
haste and with some carelessness, 
because of the Happy-Cloak, so 
that things remained like the well- 
shaped ears set close against a 
well-shaped skull, and the good 
lines of the jaw and neck, which 
were Harker lines in essence, though 
well disguised. 

The thick neck was no Harker 
neck, vanishing into a gaudy crim- 
son shirt. No Harker would have 
dressed even for Carnival in crimson 
velvet from head to foot, with a 
gilded belt supporting a gilded hol- 
ster. And yet. if a Harker had put 
this costume on — somehow, subtly, 
this is the way a Harker would have 
looked in it. 

'I'hick-bodied, barrel-chested, roll- 
ing a little with a wide stride when 
he walked, nevertheless there was 
in Sam Reed a full tide of Har- 
ker blood that showed in subtle 
ways about him. No one could 
have said why or how, but he wore 
his clothes with an air and moved 
with an assurance that was almost 
elegance in spite of the squatness 
which the upper classes so scorned. 

The velvet sleeve fell back from 
his proffered arm. He stood there 
steady, holding the crooked fore- 
arm out, looking up over it at the 
W'oman with his eyes narrow’ed, 
steel-color in his ruddy face. 

After a moment, moved by no 
impulse she could natne, the woman 
let her lips tuck in at the corners 



m an acknowledged smile, dis.lain- 
ful, condescending. She moved one 
shoulder to shrug her robe aside and 
stretched out a slender arm and a 
very slender, small-boned hand with 
plain, thick gold bands pushed down 
well at the base of every finger. 
Very delicately she laid the hand 
on Sam Reed’s arm and stepped 
down beside him. On that thick- 
forearm, hazed with red hair, the 
muscles interlacing in a hard column 
tow'ard the wrist, her hand looked 
wa.\en and unreal. She felt the 
muscles tighten beneath her touch, 
and her smile grew' even more 
condescending. 

Sam said, “Your hair wasn’t black 
the last time I saw you at Car- 
nival.” 

She gave him an aloof glance 
down her delicate thin nose. She 
did not yet trouble herself to speak. 
Sam looked at her unsmilingly. 
inspecting her feature by feature 
as if this were some portrait and 
not a breathing, disdainful woman 
who was here beside him only by 
a precarious whim. 

“It w'as yellow,” he said finally, 
with decision. The memory wa.- 
clear now, wrenched out of the 
past in almost complete detail, so 
that he realized iiow vividly it must 
have impressed him at the time. 
“That was — thirty years ago. You 
wore blue on that day, too. I 
remember it very well.” 

The woman said disinterestedly , 
her head turned aside so that she 
seemed to be addressing someone ai 
her other shoulder, “That would 
have been my daughter’s daughter. 
I expect.” 



26 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE -FICTION 



It jolted Sain. He was well 
aware of the long-lived aristocracy, 
of course. But he had never spoken 
directly to one before. To a man 
who counts in decades his own life 
and those of all his friends, the 
sudden impact of a life that spans 
centuries unimpaired must strike a 
disconcerting blow. 

He laughed, a short bark of 
sound. The woman turned her 
head and looked at him wdth faint 
interest, because she had never be- 
fore heard one of these lower 
classes make quite such a sound as 
that, self-assured, indifferent, the 
laugh of a confident man who 
doesn’t trouble himself with man- 
ners. 

Many people before Kedre Wal- 
ton had found Sam rather mysteri- 
ously fascinating. Few had Kedre’s 
perception. She knew before very 
long exactly w'hy. It w'as the same 
iiuality that she and the world of 
fashion groped for when they hung 
barbaric ornaments through the 
pierced flesh of their ears and sang 
the wailing, forthright ballads of 
bloodshed and slaughter which were 
only words to them — yet. A quality 
of vitality and virility which the 
world of man had lost, and hun- 
gered for obscurely, and would not 
accept when it was next offered 
them,- if ' they could avoid the 
gift. 

She looked at him scornfully, 
turned her head a little to let the 
black cascading curls caress her 
shoulders, and said coldly, “Your 
name ?” 

His red brows met above his nose. 

FURY 



“You don't need to know,” he told 
her with deliberate rudeness. 

For an instant she froze. Then, 
slowly, an almost imperceptible 
warming seemed to flow down her 
limbs, relaxing everything about 
her, muscles, nerves, even the chill 
of her aloofness. She drew a deep, 
silent breath and the ringed fingers 
which liad only touched his arm 
until now moved deliberately, opened 
out so that her palm lay against his 
forearm. She let the palm slide 
gently forward toward the thickly 
tapered wrist, her rings cold and 
catching a little in the heavy red 
hair that thatched his arm. 

She said without looking at him, 
“You may tell me about yourself — 
until you bore me.” 

“Are you easily bored?” 

“Very easily.” 

He looked her up and down, 
liking what he saw, and he thought 
he understood it. In forty years 
Sam Reed had gained an immense 
store of casual knowledge about 
the Keeps — not only the ordinary 
life that anyone could see, but the 
devious, secret methods a race uses 
to whip its lagging interest in living 
when life has gone on longer than 
humans can easily adjust to. He 
thought he could hold her interest. 

“Come along,” he said. 

That was the first day of Car- 
nival. On the third and last day, 
Sam got his first intimation from 
her that this casual liaison might 
not come to an end with the fes- 
tival. It rather surprised him, and 
he was not pleased. For one thing, 
there was Rosathe. And for another 

27 



— well, Sam Reed was locked in the 
confines of one prison he could 
never escape, but he would not sub- 
mit to gyves within the confines of 
his cell. 

Hanging without gravity in 
empty darkness, they were watch- 
ing a three-dimensional image. This 
particular pleasure was expensive. 
It required skilled operators and at 
least one robot plane, equipped with 
special long-view lenses and tele- 
visor. Somewhere far above a 
continent on Venus the plane was 
hanging, focused on the scene 'it 
had tracked down, 

A beast fought with a plant. 

It was enormous, that beast, and 
magnificently equipped for fighting. 
But its great wet body was wetter 
now with the blood that ran from 
gashes opened all over it by the 
saber-thorned vines. They lashed 
out with calculating accuracy, flirting 
drops of venom that flashed in the 
wet gray air. Music, deftly impro- 
vised to fit the pulse of the battle, 
crashed around them. 

Kedre touched a stvid. The 
music softened to a whisper. Some- 
where far above the plane hovered 
on ignored above the battle, the 
improviser fingered his keys un- 
heard. Kedre, in the darkness, 
turned her head with a faint silken 
rustling of unseen hair, and said, 
“I made a mistake.” 

Sam was impatient. He had 
wanted to see the finish of the 
fight. 

“What ?” he demanded brusquely. 

“You.” Out of the darkness a 
finger brushed his cheek lightly, 
with casual possessiveness. “I 



underestimated you, Sam. Or over- 
estimated. Or both.” 

He shook his head to evade the 
finger. He reached out in the 
dark, feeling his hand slip across 
a smooth, curved cheek and into 
the back-drawn hair. He found 
the ring through which the shower- 
ing curls were drawn and seized a 
handful of ringlets, shaking her 
head roughly from side to side. 
The hair moved softly over his fore- 
arm. 

“That’s enough of that,” he said. 
“I’m not your pet dog. What do 
you mean?” 

She laughed. “If you weren’t so 
young" she said insultingly. 

He released her with such abrupt- 
ness he unsteadied her on the divan 
beside him, and she laid a hand 
on his. shoulder to catch herself. 
He was silent. Then in a remote 
voice he asked, “fust how old are 
you ?” 

“Two hundred and twenty 
years.” 

“And I bore you. I’m a child.’’ 

Her laughter was flattering. “Not 
a child, Sam — not a child ! But our 
viewpoints are so different. No, 
you don’t bore me. That’s the 
trouble, or part of it. I wish you 
did. Then I could leave you to- 
night and forget all this had ever 
happened. But there’s something 
about you, Sam — I don’t know;” 
Her voice grew reflective. Behind 
it in the darkness the music swelled 
to a screaming crescendo, but very 
softly, a muted death-note as one 
adversary or the other triumphed 
far up in the swamplands over- 
head. 



28 



ASTOUNDING SCIUNO K- I'lCT 10 N 



“i£ you were the man you look,” 
Kedre Walton was saying. “If you 
only wiere! You have a fine mind, 
Sam — it’s a pity you must die too 
soon to use it. I wish you weren't 
one of the commons. I’d marry you 
— for awhile.” 

“How does it feel,” Sam asked 
her savagely, “to be a god?” 

“I’m sorry. That was patron- 
izing, wasn’t it? And you deserve 
better. How does it feel? Well, 
we are immortals, of a sort. We 
can’t help that. It feels — good, and 
frightening. It’s a responsibility. 
We do much more than just play, 
you know. I spent my first hun- 
dred years maturing and studying, 
traveling, learning people and things. 
Then for a hundred years it was 
intrigue I liked. Learning how to 
))ull strings to make the Council see 
things my way, for instance. A sort 
of jujitsu of the mind — touch a 
man’s vanity and make his ego re- 
act in just the way I mean it to. I 
think you know those tricks well 
enough yourself — only you'll never 
live long enough to master the art 
as I know it. It’s a pity. There’s 
something about you that I . . . I . . . 
never mind.” 

“Don’t say again you’d marry 
me. I wouldn’t have you.” 

“Oh yes you would. And I 
might try it, at that, even if you 
are a common. I might — ” 

Sam leaned forward across her 
knees and groped for the light 
switch. The small,- cushioned room 
sprang into illumination as the 
switch clicked, and Kedre blinked 
her beautiful ageless eyes and 



laughed half in protest and half in 
surprise. 

“Sam ! I’m blind. Don’t do 
that.” She reached to extinguish 
the light. Sam caught her hand, 
folding the fingers together over 
their heavy golden rings. 

“No. Listen. I’m leaving you 
right now and I never want to see 
you again. Understand? You’ve 
got nothing I want.” He rose 
abruptly. 

There was something almost 
serpentine in the way she moved 
to her feet in one smooth, swift 
flow, light glinting on the over- 
lapping golden sequins that sheathed 
her. 

“Wait. No, wait! Forget about 
all this, Sam. I want to show you 
something. That was just talk, 
before. I needed to sound you out. 
Sam, I want you to come with me 
to Haven. I have a problem for 
you.” , 

He looked at her coldly, his eyes 
steel splinters between the ruddy 
lashes, under the rough, ruddy 
brows. He named the sum his 
listening would cost her. She 
curled her lip at him and said she 
would pay it, the subtle Egyptian 
smile denting in tlie corners of her 
mouth. 

He followed her out of the 
room. 

Haven appro.ximated man’s half- 
forgotten birthplace. It was Earth, 
but an Earth glamourized and in- 
accurately remembered. It was a 
gigantic half-dome honeycombed 
with cells that made a shell arched 
over a great public room below. 



IiMIRX 



29 



Each cell could be blocked off, or 
a rearrangement of penetrating rays 
could give 'you the illusion of being 
in the midst of an immense, crowded 
room. Or you could use the archi- 
tect’s original plan and enjoy the 
illusion of a terrestrial back- 
ground. 

True, palms and pines seemed to 
grow out of the same surrogate 
soil, grapes and roses and blossom- 
ing fruit trees shouldered one an- 
other; but since the.se were merely 
clever images they did not matter 
except to the purist. And only 
scholars really knew the difference. 
Seasons had become an exotic piece 
of history. 

It was a strange and glamorous 
thought — ^the rhythmic equinoxes, 
earth’s face changing from green 
and brown to glittering blue-white, 
and then the magic of pale green 
blades pushing up and green buds 
breaking from the trees, and all this 
naturally, inevitably, unlike the con- 
trolled growth of hydroponics. 

Kedre Walton and Sam Reed 
came to Haven. From the stage 
where they entered they could look 
up at that immense, shining hemi- 
sphere, crowded with glittering 
cells like fragments of a bright, 
exploded dream, shifting and float- 
ing, rising and falling in the intri- 
cate light-currents. Down below, 
very far away, was the bar, a 
serpentine black shape where men 
and women made centipede-legs for 
its twisting body. 

Kedre spoke into a microphone. 
One of the circling cells moved in 
its orbit and bumped gently against 
the landing stage. They stepped 

30 



inside, and the swaying underfoot 
told Sam that they were afloat 
again. 

Leaning among cushions by the 
low table were a man and a woman. 
Sam knew the man by sight. Fie 
was Zachariah Flarker, oldest of 
one of the great Immortal families. 
He was a big man, long-boned, fine 
of line, his face a curious mixture 
of — not age — but experience, matur- 
ity, contrasting with the ageless 
youth that kept his features fresh 
and unlined. He had a smoothnes.^ 
that came from within, smooth 
assurance, smooth courtesy, smooth 
and quiet wisdom. 

The woman — 

“Sari, my dear,’’ Kedre said. 
“Fvc brought you a guest. Sari is 
my granddaughter. Zachariah, thi.= 
is ... I don’t know his name. FIc 
wouldn’t tell me.’’ 

Sari Walton had the delicate, 
disdain fid face that was apparently 
a family characteristic. Her haii 
was an improbable green-gold, fall 
ing with careful disorder loose over 
her bare shoulders. She w'orc a 
tight garment of the very fine fur 
of a landside beast, plucked down 
to the undercoat which was as short 
and thick as velvet and patterned 
with shadowy stripes like a tiger. 
Thin and flexible as cloth, it 
sheathed her tightly to the knees 
and lay in broad folds about her 
ankles. 

The two Immortals looked up, 
surprise showing briefly on their 
faces. Sam was aware of a quick 
surge of resentment that they should 
be surprised. He felt suddenly 
clumsy, conscious of his thick 

ASTOUNDING SCIRNCE-PICTION 



body and his utter unlikeness to 
these aristocrats. And he felt, too, 
his immaturity. As a child resents 
his elders, Sam resented the superior 
knowledge implicit upon these hand- 
some, quiet features. 

“Sit down.” Kedre waved to the 
cushions. Stiffly Sam lowered him- 
self, accepted a drink, sat watching 
the averted faces of his hosts with 
a hot resentment he did not try to 
hide. Why should he? 

Kedre said, “I was .thinking of 
the Free Companion when I brought 
him here. He . . . what is your 
name ? Or shall I give you one ?” 

Sullenly Sam told her. She lay 
back among the cushions, the gold 
rings gleaming softly on her hand 
as she raised her drink. She 
looked at ease, gracefully comfort- 
able, but there was a subtle tension 
in her that Sam could sense. He 
wondered if the others could. 

“I’d better explain to you first, 
Sam Reed,” she said, “that for 
twenty years now I’ve been in 
contemplation.” 

He knew what that meant — a sort 
of intellectual nunnery, a high 
religion of the mind, wherein the 
acolyte retires from the world in an 
attempt to find — -well, what is in- 
describable when found. Nirvana? 
No — stasis, perhaps, peace, balance. 

He knew somewhat more of the 
Immortals than they probably sus- 
pected. He realized, as well as a 
short-lived mortal could, how com- 
plete the life that will span up to 
a thousand years must be. The 
character must be very finely inte- 
grated, so that their lives become a 



sort of close and delicate mosaic, an 
enormous one, but made up of tiles 
the same size as those composing 
an ordinary life. You may live a 
thousand years, but one second is 
still exactly one second long at a 
time. And periods of contempla- 
tion were sometimes necessary to 
preserve balance. 

“What about the Free Com- 
panion ?” Sam demanded harshly. 
He knew. Robin Hale, last of the 
warriors, was very much in public 
interest just now. The deep dis- 
content which was urging popular 
favor toward the primitive had 
caught up the Companion, draped 
him in synthetic glamour, and was 
eager to follow his project toward 
colonization of the landside. 

Or they thought they were eager. 
So far most of the idea was still on 
paper. When it came to an actual 
struggle with the ravening fury that 
was continental Venus — well, real- 
ists suspected how different a 
matter that might turn out to be. 
But just now Robin Hale’s crusade 
for colonization was enjoying a 
glowing, irrational boom. 

“What about him?” Zachariah 
Harker asked. “It won’t work. 
Do you think it could, Sam Reed ?” 

Sam gave him a red-browed 
scowl. He snorted and shook his 
head, deliberately not troubling to 
answer aloud. He was conscious 
of a rising desire to provoke discord 
among these smoothly civilized Im- 
mortals. 

“When I came out of contempla- 
tion,” Kedre said, “I found this 
Free Companion’s project the most 
interesting thing .that was happen- 



FORY 



31 



ing. And one of the most danger- 
ous. For many reasons, we feel 
that to attempt colonization now 
would be disastrous.” 

Sam grunted. “Why?” 

Zachariah Harker leaned across 
the table to set down his drink. “We 
aren’t ready yet,” he said smoothly. 
“It will take careful planning, 
psychologically and technologically. 
And we're a declining race, Sam 
Reed. We can’t afford to fail. This 
Free Companion project will fail. 
It must not be given the chance.” 
He lifted his brows and regarded 
Sam thoughtfully. 

Sam squirmed. He had an un- 
comfortable feeling that the deep, 
quiet gaze could read more upon 
his face than he wanted anyone to 
read. You couldn’t tell about these 
people. They had lived too long. 
Perhaps they knew too much. - 
He said bluntly, “You want me 
to kill him?” 

There was silence in the little 
room for a moment. Sam had an 
instant’s impression that until he 
spoke they had not thought the 
thing through quite so far. He 
felt a swift rearrangement of ideas 
going on all about him, as if the 
Immortals were communicating with 
one another silently. People who 
have known each other for so many 
centuries would surely develop a 
mild ability at thought-reading, if 
only through the nuances of facial 
expression. Silently, then, the three 
Immortals seemed to exchange 
confidences above Sam’s head. 

Then Kedre said, “Yes. Yes, kill 
him if you can.” 

“It would be the best solution,” 



Zachariah added slowly. “To do 
it now — today. Not later than 
forty-eight hours from now. The 
thing’s growing too fast to wait. 
If we can stop him now, there’s no 
one ready to step into his place as 
figurehead. Tomorrow^ someone, 
might. Can you handle it, Sam 
Reed ?” 

Sam scowled at them. “Are you 
all fools?” he demanded. “Or do 
you know more about me than I 
think ?” 

Kedre laughed. “We know. It’s 
been three days, my dear. Do you 
think I let myself get this involved 
without knowing the mari I was 
with ? I had your name before 
evening of the first day. I knew 
your record by the next morning. 
It’s- quite safe to intrust a job like 
this to you. You can handle it and 
for a price you’ll keep quiet.” 

Sam flushed. He hated her con- 
sciously for the first time then. No 
man cares to be told he has been 
made a fool of, 

“That,” he said, “will cost you 
twice what it would cost anyone 
else in the Keep.” He named a 
very high price. 

Zachariah said, “No. We can 
get—” 

“Please, Zachariah.” Kedre 
lifted her hand. “I’ll pay it. I 
have a reason.” 

He looked at her carefully. The 
reason was plain on her face, and 
for an instant Zachariah winced. 
He had hoped the free-marriage she 
had stepped out of when she went 
into contemplation might be re- 
sumed very soon now. Seeing her 



82 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 




eyes upon Sam, he recpgnized that 
it would not be soon. 

Sari leaned forward and put her 
pale, narrow hand -on his arm. 

“Zachariah,” she said, warning 
and possessiveness in her voice. 
“Let her have lier way, my dear. 
There’s time enough for every- 
thing.” 

Grandmother and granddaughter, 
almost mirror-images, . exchanged a 
look in which Sam, w'ho had missed 
nothing, thought he saw both rivalry 
and understanding. 

Zachariah said, “Look over 
there.” He moved his hand and 
the cell wall glowed into transpar- 
ence. Floating a little distance off 
among the crowding jcells was an 



At the long bar he found a 
vacant seat and ordered a drink. 
The bartender looked at him sTiarply. 
This was a rendezvous for the Im- 



inclosure in which a man sat alone. 
. “He’s been here for two* hours now,” 
Zachariah went on. 

The cell drifted nearer. The 
man in it was thin, dark, frowning. 
He wore a dull brown costume. 

“I know him by sight,” Sam said, 
and stood up. The floor rocked 
slightly at the motion. “Drop me 
at the landing stage. I’ll take care 
of him for you.” 



FURV 



33 



mortals and the upper classes; it 
was not often that a man as squatly 
plebeian as Sam Reed appeared at 
the bar. But there was something 
about Sam’s scowl and the 
imperiousness of his order that 
after a moment made the bartender 
mutter “Yes, sir,’’ rather sullenly 
and bring him his drink. 

Sam sat there a long while. He 
ordered twice more and made the 
drinks last, while the great shell 
hummed and spun above him and 
the crowd filled the dome with 
music and a vast amorphous 
murmuring. He watched the float- 
ing cell with the brown figure in- 
side drift aimlessly around the vast 
circle. He was waiting for the 
Immortal to descend, and he was 
thinking very fast. 

Sam was frightened. It was 
dangerous to mix in the affairs of 
the Immortals even politically; To 
get emotionally involved was sheer 
suicide and Sam had no illusion 
about his chances for survival a- 
soon as his usefulness was over. 
He had seen the look of mild 
speculation that Zachariah Harker 
turned on him. 

When the Free Companion’s cell 
drifted finally toward the landing 
stage, Sam Reed was there to meet 
it. He wasted no words. 

“I’ve just been hired to kill you, 
Hale,” he said. 

They were lea^•ing Flaven together 
an hour later when the Sheffield 
gang caught up with Sam. 

Sam Reed would never have 
come this far in his career if he 
hadn’t been a glib and convincing 
talker when he had to be. Robin 

84 



Hale had certainly been a target for 
glib promotioners often enough 
since his colonizing crusade began 
to know how to brush them off. 
But here again the Harker blood 
spoke silently to its kindred Im- 
mortality in Hale, and though Sam 
credited his own glibness, it was 
the air of quiet conviction carried 
by his subsurface heritage which 
convinced the Free Companion. 

Sam talked very fast — in a lei- 
surely way. He knew that his life 
and Hale’s were bound together 
just now by a short rope — a rope 
perhaps forty-eight hours long. 
Within those limits both were safe. 
Beyond them, both would die un- 
less something very, very clever 
occurred to them. Sam’s voice as 
he explained this carried sincere 
conviction. 

This was the point at which the 
Sheffield boys picked him up. The 
two came out of the Haven portal 
and stepped onto the slow-speed 
ril)bon of a moving Way. Their a 
deliberate press of the crowd sepa- 
rated them a bit and Sam, turning 
to fight his way back, saw too late 
the black bulb in the hand that rose 
toward his face and smelled the 
sickening fragrance of an invisible 
dust too late to hold his breath. 

Everything about him slowed and 
stopped. 

A hand slipped through his arm. 
He w’as being urged along the Way. 
Globes and lanterns made patche.s 
of color along the street until it 
curved ; there they coalesced into a 
blob of hypnotic color. The War- 
slid smoothly along and shining, 
perfumed mists curled in fog-banks 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



above it. But he saw it all in 
stopped motion. Dimly he knew 
that this was his own fault. He 
had let Kedre distract him; he had 
allowed himself to take on a new 
job before he finished an old one 
that required all his attention. He 
would pay now. 

Then something like a whirlwind 
in slow motion struck across the 
moving belts of the Way. Sam 
was aware only of jostling and 
shouts and the thud of fists on 
flesh. He couldn’t sort out the 
faces, though he saw the Free 
Companion’s floating Ijefore him 
time and again in a sort of palimp- 
sest superimposed upon other faces, 
dimly familiar, all of them shout- 
ing. 

Witli a dreamlike smoothness he 
saw the other faces receding back- 
ward along the slower ramp while 
the lights slipped rapidly away at 
the edges of the highspeed Way and 
Robin Hale’s hand gripped his 
ann. 

He let the firmness of the hand 
guide him. He was moving, but not 
moving. His brain had ceased al- 
most entirely to function. He knew 
only vaguely that they were mount- 
ing the ramp to one of the hydro- 
ponic rooms, that Hale was clinking 
coins into an attendant’s hand, that 
now they had paused before a tank 
where a heavy, gray-green foliage 
clustered. 

From far off Hale’s voice mur- 
mured, “It usually grows on this 
stuff. Hope they haven’t sprayed 
it too well, but it’s hardy. It gets in 
-everywhere. Here!’’ A sound of 
scraping fingernails, a glimpse of 



bluish lichen crushed between Hale’s 
palms and dusted in Sam’s face. 

Then everything speeded up into 
sudden accelerated motion timed to 
Sam’s violent sneezes. A stinging 
pain began in his sinuses and spread 
through his brain. It exploded 
there, rose to a crescendo, faded. 

Sweating and shaking, he found 
he could talk again. Time and 
motion came back to normal and he 
blinked streaming eyes at Hale. 

“All right?’’ the Free Companion 
asked. 

“I — guess so.’’ Sam wiped his 
eyes. 

“What brought that on?’’ Hale 
inquired with interest. 

“My own fault,” Sam told him 
shortly. “Personal matter. I’ll 
settle it later — if I live.” 

Hale laughed. “We’ll go up to 
my place: I want to talk to you.” 

“They don’t understand what 
they’ll be facing,” the Free Com- 
panion said grimly. “I can't seem 
to convince anyone of that. They’ve 
got a romantic vision of a crusade 
and not one in a thousand has "ever 
even set . foot on dry land.” 

“Convince me,” Sam said. 

“I savy the Logician,” Hale be- 
gan. “The crusade was his idea. 
I needed — sometliing. This is it, 
and I’m afraid of it now. It’s got 
out of. hand. These people are 
emotional dead-beats. They’re 
pawing me like so many dogs beg- 
,ging for romance. All I can offer 
them is personal hardship beyond 
anything they can even dream, and 
no hope of success for this genera- 
tion or the next. That sort of 

AST— 2S 35 



spirit seems to have bred out of 
the race since we’ve lived in Keeps. 
Maybe the underwater horizons are 
too narrow. They can’t see beyond 
them, or their own noses.” He 
grinned. “I offer not peace but a 
sword,” he said. “And nobody will 
believe it.” 

“I’ve never been topside myself,” 
Sam told him. “What’s it like?” 

“You’ve seen it in the projectors, 
relayed from planes above the jun- 
gles. So have most people. And 
that’s the fallacy — seeing it from 
above. It looks pretty. I’d like to 
take a projector down into the mud 
and look up at all that stuff towering 
over and reaching down, and the 
mud- wolves erupting underfoot and 
the poison-vines lashing out. If I 
did, my whole crusade would fall flat 
and there’d be an end of the coloniz- 
ing.” He shrugged. 

“I’ve made a start, you know, in 
the old fort,” he said. “Tfie Doone- 
men had it once. Now the jungle’s 
got it l)ack. The old walls and bar- 
riers are deactivated and useless. All 
that great technology is dead now. 
Whole rooms are solid blocks of veg- 
etation, alive with vermin and snakes 
and poison plants. We’re , cleaning 
that out, but keeping it clean — well, 
that’s going to take more than these 
people have got. Why, the lichens 
alone will eat through wood and glass 
and steel and flesh! And we don’t 
know enough about the jungle. Here 
on Venus the ecology has no terres- 
trial parallel. And it won’t be enough 
simply to hold the fort. It’s got to 
be self-supporting.” 

“That’ll take money and backing,” 



Sam reminded him. “The Families 
are dead against it^ — now.” 

“I know. I think they’re wrong 
So does the Logician.” 

“Are you working alone on this?” 
Hale nodded. “So far I am." 
“Why? A good promotion man 
could get you all the backing you 
need.” 

“No good promotion man would. 
It’d be a swindle. I believe in this, 
Reed. With me it is a crusade. I 
wouldn’t trust a man who’d be will- 
ing to tackle it, knowing the truth.” 
A beautiful idea was beginning to 
take voluptuous shape in Sam’s mind. 
He said, “Would you trust me?” 
“Why should I ?” 

Sam thought back rapidly over 
how much of the truth he had al- 
ready told Hale. Not too much. It 
was safe to go ahead. “Because I’ve 
already risked my neck to warn 
you,” he said. “If I’d gone ahead 
with the job Harker gave me, I’d be 
collecting a small fortune right now. 
I didn’t. I haven’t told you why yet. 
I guess I don’t need to. I feel the 
way you do about colonizing. I could 
make some money out of promoting 
it — I won’t deny that. But nothing 
like the money I could make killing 
you.” 

“I’ve just told you the thing can’t 
succeed,” Hale pointed out. But there 
was a light in hjs eyes and more 
eagerness in his manner than Sam 
had yet seen. 

“Hooked !” Sam. thouglit. Aloud, 
he said, “Maybe not. All it needs is 
plenty of backing — and I mean plen- 
ty I I think I can provide that. And 
we’ve got to give the crusaders a 



36 



ASTOUNDING SCI R NCK- FI CT ION 



substilutc j»oal for the real one, 
■somethinjj they think they can collect 
on in their lifetime. Something they 
can collect on. No cheating. Shall 
I try?” 

Hale pinched his chin thoughtful- 
ly. At last he said, “Come with me 
to the Logician.” 

.Sam hedged. He was afraid of 
the Logician. His own motives w'ere 
not the kind that could stand the 
light of clear reason. But Hale, es- 
sentially romanticist as he was, had 
several centuries of e.xperience be- 
hind him to bolster up his apparent 
naivete. They argued for over an 
hour. 

Then Sam went with him to see 
the Logician. 

A globe spoke to them, a shining 
white globe on an iron pedestal. It 
said, “I told you I can’t foretell the 
future. Hale.” 

“But you know the right answers.” 

“The right answer for you may not 
be the right one tor Sant Reed.” 

Sam moved uneasily. “Then make 
it tw’o answers,” he said. He thought 
it was a machine speaking. He had 
let down his guard a trifle ; machines 
weren’t human. Willy-nilly, he had 
given the data it required. Now' he 
waited uneasily, knowing the hours 
of his deadline were .slipping away 
while Kedre and Harker waited for 
new'S of the Companion’s death. 

In the silver globe shadow's swam, 
the distorted reflection of the Logi- 
cian’s long, sardonic face. Robin 
Hale could trace the likeness but he 
knew' that to one who didn’t know 
the secret the shadows would be 
meaningless. 



“The' Keep people aren't pio- 
neers.” the Logician said unnecessa- 
rily. "You need recruits from the 
reformatories.” 

“We need good men,” Hale said. 

"Criminals are good men, most of 
them. They're merely displaced so- 
cially or temporally. Any antisocial 
individual can be thoroughly pro- 
social in the right environment. Mal- 
contents and criminals will be your 
best men. You’ll want biologists, nat- 
uralists, geologists — ” 

“We’d have to pay tremendous 
sums to get even second-rate men,” 
■Sam objected. 

“No you wouldn't. You’d have to 
pay — yes. But you’ll be surprised 
how many top-flight men are malcon- 
tents. The Keeps are too circum- 
scribed. No good worker is ever 
hapjjy operating at less than full ca- 
pacity, and who in the Keeps has 
ever used more than a fraction of 
his ability since the undersea was 
conquered ?” 

"You think we can go ahead 
then ? Hale asked specifically. 

“If you and Reed can get around 
this current danger — ask me again.” 

“Hale tells me,” Sam put in, “that 
the Logician disagrees with the Fam- 
ilies about colonization. Why won’t 
you help us against the Families, 
then?” 

The shadows moved in the globe ; 
the Logician was shaking his head. 

“I’m not omnipotent. The Fami- 
lies mean well — as they see it. They 
take a long view. By intrigue and 
influence they do sway the Council 
decisions, though the Council is per- 
fectly free. But the Families sit back 
and decide policy, and then see that 



FUUY 



87 



their decisions are carried out. Nom- 
inall}’ the councils and the governors 
run the Keeps. Actually the Immor- 
tals run them. They’ve got a good 
deal of social consciousness, but 
they’re ruthless, too. The laws they 
promote may seem harsh, to the 
short-lived, but the grandchildren of 
the apparent victims may live to 
thank 'the Families for their harsh- 
ness. From the Families’ viewpoint 
common good covers a longer period 
of time. In this case I think they’re 
wrong. 

“The race is going downhill fast. 
iThe Families argue we can’t finance 
but one colonizing effort. If it fails 
we’re ruined. We’ll never try again. 
We won't have the materials or the 
human drive. We’ve got to wait until 
they give the word, until they’re con- 
vinced failure won't happen. I say 
they’re wrong. I say the race is de- 
clining faster than they think. If we 
wait for their word, we’ll have 
waited too long . . . 

“But the Families run this planet. 
Not the Logician. I’ve opposed their 
opinions too often in other things for 
them to believe me now. They fig- 
ure I’m against them in everything.” 

To Robin Hale it was an old story. 
He said impatiently when the voice 
paused, “Can you give us a progno- 
sis, Logician? Is there enough evi- 
dence in now to tell us whether we’ve 
got a chance to succeed ?” 

The Logician said nothing for 
awhile. Then a curious sound came 
from the globe. It was a chuckle 
that grew to a laugh which startled 
Hale and uterly astonished Sam 
Reed. That a machine could laugh 
was inconceivable. 

88 



“Landside will be colonized,” the 
Logician said, still chuckling, 
“You’ve got a chance — a good 
chance. And a better chance, my 
friend, if this man Reed is with you. 
That’s all I can say, Hale. I think 
it’s enough.” 

Sam froze, staring at the shad- 
ows swimming in the globe. All his 
preconceived ideas turned over in his 
head. Was the Logician after all a 
fraud? Was it offering them mere 
guesswork? And if it could be this 
wrong on the point of Sam’s depend- 
ability, of what value was anything 
else it said ? 

“Thank you. Logician,” the Free 
Companion was saying, and Sam 
turned to stare anew at Robin Hale. 
Why should he thank a machine, and 
especially as faulty a machine as this 
had just proved itself to be? 

A deep chuckle sounded from the 
globe as they turned away. It rose 
again to laughter that followed them 
out of the hall, wave upon wave of 
full-throated laughter that had some- 
thing of sympathy in it and much of 
irony. 

The Logician was laughing from 
the bottom of his lungs, from the 
bottom of his thousand-years e.xperi- 
ence, at the future of Sam Reed. 

“ ‘If we can get around this cur- 
rent danger — ’ ” Sam quoted the Lo- 
gician. He was sitting beside a trans- 
parent plastic table, very dusty, look- 
ing at the Free Companion across it. 
This was a dim secret room the 
Slider owned. So long as they sat 
here they were safe, but they couldn’t 
stay forever. Sam had a fair idea 
of liow many of the Families’ retain- 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



ers were reporting on his movements 
and Hale’s. 

“Any ideas ?’’ Hale asked. 

“You don’t seem much worrie^. 
What’s the matter? Don’t you be- 
lieve me?’’ 

“Oh, yes. I’ll admit I mightn’t be- 
lieve just any man who came up to 
me in a crowd and said he’d been 
hired to kill me. It’s easy to say, if 
you’re working up to a favor. But 
I’ve rather been expecting the Fam- 
ilies to do something drastic, and — I 
trust the Logician. How about it — 
have you any ideas ?’’ 

Sam looked at him from under 
scowling red brows. He had begun 
to hate Hale for this easy acquies- 
cence. He wanted it. He needed it. 
But he didn’t like Hale’s motive. 
Hale wasn’t likely to intrust the suc- 
cess or failure of his crusade to the 
doubtful integrity of a promoter, 
which was the role Sam aspired to 
now. Even though the Logician — 
moved by flawed logic — had pro- 
nounced favorable judgment and 
even though Hale trusted the Logi- 
cian implicitly, there was another 
motive. • 

Robin Hale was an Immortal. 

The thing Sam had sensed and 
hated in the Waltons and Harker he 
.sensed and hated in Hale, too. A 
tremendous and supreme self-confi- 
dence. He was not the slave of time ; 
time, served him.. A man with cen- 
turies of experience behind him must 
already have encountered very nearly 
every combination of social circum- 
stance he was likely tcr encounter. 
He had a pattern set for him. There 
• would have been time enough to ex- 
periment, to think things over care- 



fully and try out this reaction and 
that until the best treatment for a 
given set of circumstances would 
come automatically to mind. 

It wasn’t fair, Sam thought child- 
ishly. Problems that shorter-lived 
men never solved the infinitely re- 
sourceful Immortals must know 
backward and forward. And there 
was another unfairness — problems 
the ordinary man had to meet with 
drastic solutions or compromise Hale 
could meet simply by waiting. There 
was always, with the Immortals, that 
last, surest philosophy to fall back 
on : This, too, zmll pass. 

The Immortals, then, were random 
factors. They had extensions in time 
that no non-Immortal could quite un- 
derstand. You had to experience that 
long, long life in order to know . . . 

Sam drew a deep breath and an- 
swered Hale’s question, obliquely 
enough. 

“The Families — I mean specifically 
the Waltons and Harkers — won’t 
strike overtly. They don’t want to 
be publicly connected with your 
death. They’re not afraid of the 
masses, because the masses have 
never organized. There’s never been 
any question of a revolt, for there’s 
never been any motive for revolt. 
The Families are just. It’s only with 
intangibles like this colonizing cru- 
sade that a question may come up, 
and — I hope — that may make it a 
dangerous question for them. Be- 
cause for the first time the masses 
really are organized, in a loose sort 
of way — they’re excited about the 
crusade.’’ He squinted at Hale. “I’ve 
got an idea about Low to use that, 
but — ’’ Sam glanced at the dusty 



as 



rvJir 



telexisor screen in the wall above 
them — “I can’t explain it yet.” 

“All right.” Hale sounded com- 
fortable and unexcited. It was nor- 
mal enough, Sam told himself, wdth 
a suddenly quickened pulse as he 
realized consciously for the first time 
that to this man warfare — that glam- 
orous thing of the dead past — was a 
familiar story. He had seen slaugh- 
ter and wreaked slaughter. The 
threat of death must by now be so 
old a tale to him that he faced it 
with unshaken nerves. Sam hated 
him anew. 

“Meanwhile” — he forced himself 
to speak calmly — “I’ve got to sell 
myself to you on the crusading idea. 
Shall I talk awhile ?” 

Hale grinned and nodded. 

“We’ve got the unique problem of 
fighting off converts, not recruiting 
them. We need key men and we 
need manpower. One’s expendable. 
The other — you can protect your key 
men, can’t you ?” 

“Against some dangers. Not 
against boredom. Not against a few 
things, like lichens — they can get 
into an air vent and eat a man alive. 
Some of the germs mutate under 
UV, instead of dying. Oh, it isn’t 
adventure.” 

“So we’ll need a screening process. 
Malcontents. Technical successes 
and personal failures.” 

“Up to a point, yes. What do you 
suggest?” The laconic voice filled 
Sam with unreasonable resentment. 
He had a suspicion that this man al- 
ready knew most of the answers, 
that he was leading Sam on, like a 
reciting child, partly to test his 



knowledge, partly perhaps in the 
hope that Sam might have ideas to 
offer which Hale could twist to his 
own use. And yet — under the con- 
fidence, under the resourcefulness 
that all his experiences had bred, the 
man showed an unconquerable na- 
ivete which gave Sam hope. Basically 
Hale was a cmsader. Basically he 
was selfless and visionary. A million 
years of experience, instead of a few 
hundred, would never give him 
.something Sam had been bom with. 
Yes, this was worth a try . . . 

“Of course, not all the failures 
will do,” he went on. “We’ve got to 
find the reasons why they’re malcon- 
tents. You had technicians in the 
old days, when the wars were going 
on.r 

Hale nodded. “Yes. But they had 
the traditions of the Free Compan- 
ions behind them.” 

“We’ll start a new tradition. I 
don’t know what. Ad astra per as- 
pera, maybe.” Sam considered. “Can 
you get access to the psych records 
and personal histories of those old 
tachnicians ?” 

“Some of the?n must have been 
saved. I think I can. Why?” • 

“This will come later, but I think 
it’s our answer. Break down the fac- 
tors that made them successful. The 
big integrators will do that. It’ll give 
us the prime equation. Then break 
down the factors that make up the 
current crop of technicians — mal- 
contents preferable. X equals a suc- 
cessful wartime technician, plus the 
equivalent of the old tradition. Find 
out who’s got X today and give him 
the new tradition. 

“It'll take careful propaganda and 



A S T O U .V m X G S r I E X f • K • T ' K ■ T I O .V 



semantic Imild-up. All we need is 
the right channeling of public opin- 
ion now. Catchwords-, a banner, a 
new Peter the Hermit, maybe. The 
Crusades had a perfect publicity 
buildup. I’ve given you a solution 
for your technicians — now al)Out the 
manpower and the financial back- 
ing.” Sam glanced at the quiet Im- 
mortal face and looked aw’ay again. 
Tint he went on. 

"We’ll have to screen the volun- 
teers for manpower, too. There are 
plenty of good men left in the human 
race. They won’t all fold up at the 
first threat of danger. We’ll set up 
a very rigid series of tests for every 
potential colonist. Phony them up if 
we have to. One set of answers for 
the public, another for us. You can’t 
openly reject a man for potential 
cowardice, or the rest might not dare 
take the test. But we’ve got to know.” 

"So far — good,” Hale said. "What 
about money ?” 

"How much have you got?” 

Hale shrugged. “Pennies. I’ve 
got a foothold, cleaning out Doone 
Keep. But it’ll take real money to 
keep the thing going. 

“Form a company and sell stock. 
People will always gamble. Especial- 
ly if they get dividends — and the 
dividends they w'ant aren’t merely 
money. Glamour. Excitement. The 
romance they’ve been starved for. 
The reason they go in for second- 
hand thrills.” 

"Will rejected volunteers buy 
stock ?” 

Sam laughed. ‘T’ve got it ! Every 
share of stock will pay a dividend of 
thrills. All the excitement of volun- 
teering with none of the danger. 



Every move the colony makes will be 
covered by televisor — with a direct 
beam to the receiver of every stock- 
holder !” 

Hale gave him a glance in which 
anger and adiiiiration were mingled. 
Sam was aware of a little surge of 
gratification at having startled the 
man into something like approval. 
But Hale’s next reaction spoiled it. 

"No. That’s cheap. And it’s cheat- 
ing. This is no Roman holiday for 
the thrill-hunters. And I’ve told you 
it’s hard work, not romance. It isn’t 
exciting, it’s drudgery.” 

“It can be exciting,” Sam assured 
him. “It’ll have to be. You’ve got 
to make compromises. People pay 
for thrills. Well, thrills can be staged 
landside, can’t they?” 

Hale moved his shoulders uncom- 
fortably. "I don’t like it.” 

"Yes, but it could be done. Just 
in theory — is there anything going 
on landside right now that could be 
built up?” 

After a pause. Hale said, “Well, 
we’ve been having trouble with an 
ambulant vine — it’s thermotropic. 
Body heat attracts it. Refrigerating 
units in our jungle suits stop it cold, 
of course. And it’s easy to draw it 
off by tossing thermite or something' 
hot arouhd. It heads for that instead 
of u?, and gets burned into ash.” 
“What does it look like?” 

Hale went into details. Sam sat 
back, looking pleased. 

"That’s the ticket. Perfectly safe, 
but it’ll look ugly as the devil. That 
ought to help us screen out the unfit 
by scaring ’em off right at the start. 
W’e’ll just have your men turn off 



FURY 



41 



their refrigerating units and stage a 
battle with the vines, while somebody 
stands by out of' camera range with 
thermite ready to throw. We’ll send 
out a message that the vines are 
breaking through — cover it with tel- 
evisor — and that does it!” 

‘‘No,” Hale said. 

“The Crusades started as a pub- 
licity stunt,” Sam remarked. But he 
didn't press the point just yet. In- 
stead he mentioned the fact that both 
of them would be dead within thirty- 
six hours now unless something 
could be worked out. He had seen 
a flicker in the wall screen. It was 
time to bring up the next subject on 
the agenda. 

“The Families could get rid of us 
both in ways that look perfectly in- 
nocent. A few germs, for instance. 
They’ve got us cold unless we do 
somethipg drastic. My idea is to try a 
trick so outrageous they won't know 
how to meet it until it’s had a chance 
to work.” 

“What do you mean?” 

. “The Families depend tremen- 
dously on their own prestige to main- 
tain their power. Their real power 
is an intangible— longevity. But pub- 
lic faith in their infallibility has kept 
them on top. Attack that. Put them 
in a spot- where they’ve got to defend 
us.” 

“But how?” 

“You’re a public darling. Harker 
gave me a forty-eight hour deadline 
because he was afraid you might 
turn up a henchman at any moment 
who could step into your shoes and 
carry on the crusade even if he got 
you out of the way.” Sam tapped 
his own chest. “Fin the man. I’ve 

42 



got to be, to save my own skin. But 
it offers you an out, too. We halve 
the danger if either of us is replace- 
able — by the other. It wouldn’t solve 
anything to kill either of us if the 
other lives.” 

“But how the devil do you expect 
to make yourself that important to 
the public in the few hours you’ve 
got left ?” Hale was really interested 
now. 

Sam gave him a confident grin. 
Then he kicked the leg of his chair. 
An opening widened in the hall and 
the Slider came in, sniffling. 

He lowered his great bulk to a 
chair and looked curiously at Hale. 
Sam said, “First — the Sheffield 
gang’s after me. I can’t afford to 
fight it out right now. Got some- 
thing really big on the fire. Can you 
call ’em off?” 

“Might manage it,” the Slider said. 
It was a guarantee. The old poison- 
master was still a top danger in the 
underworld of the Keeps. 

“Thanks.” Sam turned in his 
chair to face the Slider. “Now, the 
important thing. I need a quick job 
of sound-track faking.” 

“That’s easy,” the Slider assured 
him, and sniffled. 

“And the faces to match.” 

“That’s harder. Whose faces ?” 
“Zachariah Harker, for one. Any 
other Harkers or Waltons you’ve got 
on file, but Zachariah first.” 

The Slider stared hard at him, for- 
getting for the moment even to snif- 
fle. “Harkers?” he demanded. And 
then chuckled une.xpectedly. “Well, 
guess I can swing it, but it’ll cost 
you. How soon you want the job 
done ?’■* 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



Sani told him. 



Faking a sound-track was an im- 
memorially old gag, almost as old as 
sound-tracks themselves. It takes 
only nominal skill to snip out and re- 
arrange already spoken words into 
new sequences. But only recently 
had a technique been developed for 
illicit extensions of the idea. It took 
a very deft operator, and a highly 
skilled one, to break down speech- 
sounds into their basic sibilants and 
gutturals and build up again a whole 
new pattern of speech. It was not 
usually possible to transpose from 
one language to another because of 
the different phonetic requirements, 
but any recorded speech of reason- 
able length could usually be mined 
for a large enough number of basic 
sounds to construct almost any other 
recorded speech out of its building 
blocks. 

From this it was, of course, only a 
step to incorporating the speaker vis- 
itally into the changed speech. The 
lips that shaped each sound could be 
stopped in mid-syllable and the pic- 
tures transposed with the sounds. 

The result was Jerky to the ear 
and eye. Tliere was always a certain 
amount of reducing and enlarging 
and adjustment to make the faces 
from various speeches into a single 
speech. Some experiments had even 
been made to produce a missing 
full-face view, for verisimilitude, by 
projecting onto a three-dimensional 
form- the two-dimensional images of 
profile or three-quarter views to 
blend into the desired face, and pho- 
tographing that anew. Afterward a 
high degree of skill was necessary to 



blend and blur the result into con- 
vincing smoothness. 

The Slider had access to a techni- 
cian who knew the job forw'ard and 
backward. And there ivere plenty of 
Harker and Walton records on file. 
But at best it was a dangerous thing 
to tamper with and Sam knew it. He 
had no choice. 

It took five hours to talk Robin 
Hale into the hoax. Sam had to con- 
vince him of his own danger first; 
there were Family agents by now 
ringing in the building where they 
hid, so that wasn’t too hard. Then 
he had to convince him of Sam’s own 
trustworthiness, which Sam finally 
managed by rehearsing his argu- 
ments with the straps of a pressure 
gauge recording his blood-reactions 
for conscious lies. That took some 
semantic hedging, for Sam had much 
to conceal and had to talk around it. 

“You and I are as good as dead,” 
he told Hale, with the recording 
needles holding steady, for this was 
true enough. “Sure, this trick is 
dangerous. It’s practically suicide. 
But if I’ve got to die anyhow. I’d as 
soon do it taking chances. And it’s 
our only chance, unless you can think 
of something better. Can you ?” 

The Immortal couldn’t. 

And so on the evening telecast ad- 
vance word went out that Robin Hale 
would make an important announce- 
ment about the colony. All through 
the Keeps, visors were tuned in on 
the telecast, waiting. What they were 
really waiting for was a moment 
when the Harker s and Waltons in- 
volved in the faked reel were to- 
gether and out of the way. 



I'URY 



■43 




He said he had hoped to tell them 
in detail of the magnificent idea 
which his good friend Sam Reed had 
produced to make full-scale coloniz- 
ing possible without delay. But trou- 
ble landside had just broken out 
and he had been called up to offer 
his experience as an old Free Com- 
panion to the men who were facing 
a new and deadly menace up above 
them all, on the jungle shore. Then 
he offered them a stiff, quick salute 
and left the screen. 

Zachariah Barker’s face replaced 
Hale’s. It would have taken a bet- 
ter than expert eye to detect the 
faint qualities of unevenness which 
might betray the fact that this was a 
synthesis of rearranged sound-waves 
and light-waves. Technkally, even 
Zachariah, watching the screen from 
wherever he was just now, could not 
deny he had spoken the words, for 



The private lives of the Immortals 
were never very private, and the 
Slider had a network of interlock- 
ing connections that functioned very 
efficiently. Hale’s influence kept 
the telecast schedule open and wait- 
ing, and presently word came that 
the Immortals involved were all ac- 
counted for. 

Then on the great public screens 
and on countless private ones the 
driving color-ads gave place to Robin 
Hale’s face. He was dressed for 
landside, and he spoke his lines with 
a reluctance and a haste to get it 
over that gave the words an air of 
unexpected conviction. 



44 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



every sound he heard and every mo- 
tion of his own' lips was genuine. 

The synthetic speech was a tri- 
umph in semantics. It was typical 
of Sani that he should use this boldly 
suicidal venture not only to clear 
himself and Hale, if he could, but 
also to further his plans for the col- 
ony. So Harker was made to name 
Sam — brought forward with modest 
reluctance to stand beside the Im- 
mortal as the speech went on — as the 
public-spirited, adventurous philan- 
thropist who was going to make the 
colonizing crusade possible. 

Sam Reed, man of the people, 
.short-lived but far-seeing, would 
Head his fellows to success behind 
Robin Hale in the great crusade. 
Landside lay the future of the race. 
Even the Harker s, Zachariah said, 
had been convinced of that by the 
persuasions of Sam and Hale. A great 
adventure lay ahead. Volunteers 
would be accepted for examination 
very soon. Ad astro per aspera! 

He spoke of danger. He went into 
details, each word carefully chosen 
and charted to make the listeners dis- 
contented. He hinted at the stag- 
nation of the Keeps, of growing ra- 
cial debility, new vulnerabilities to 
disease. And most important — man 
had stopped growing. His destiny 
was no longer to be found in the 
Keeps. The great civilizations of 
Earth must not reach a dead end 
under the seas of this fertile planet. 
Ad astro! 

Zachariah’s face left the screen. 
Sam stepped forward to clinch the 
matter, nervous and deeply worried 
under his calm. Now that he had 
actually done this, he quivered with 



belated qualms. What would the 
Harkers do when they discovered 
how fantastically they had been 
tricked ? How outrageously their 
innermost convictions had been re- 
versed and repudiated before all the 
Keeps, apparently in their own 
words ! They must be moving al- 
ready; the Families were geared to 
rapid action when the need arose. 
But what they would do Sam 
couldn’t guess. 

He spoke with quiet confidence 
into the screen. He outlined his ideas 
for offering the people themselves 
the opportunity to join in the cru- 
sade, financially if not personally. In 
deft words he referred to the hard- 
ships and dangers of landside; he 
wanted to discourage all but the 
hardiest from offering as personal 
volunteers. And to aid in that, as 
well as to provide a smash finale to 
his scheme, he made his great an- 
nouncement. 

Something which until today had 
been a plaything for the wealthy 
would now be offered to all who 
owned shares in the magnificent ven- 
ture before mankind. Each partici- 
pant could watch the uses to which 
his money was put, share almost at 
first hand in the thrills and perils of 
landside living. 

Look! 

On the screen flashed a dizzying 
view of jungle that swooped up to- 
ward the beholder with breathtaking 
swiftness. A ring of velvet-black 
mud studded, the flowery quilt of 
trectops. The ring swung up toward 
the view and you could see an irides- 
cent serpent slithering across the 
blackness. The mud erupted and a 



it'URy 



45 



mud-wolf’s jaws closed upon the 
snake. Blood and mud spattered 
wildly. Churning and screaming, 
the combatants sank from sight and 
, the velvety pool quivered into still- 
ness again except for the rings that 
ran out around it from time to time 
as bubbles of crimson struggled up 
and burst on the surface with dull 
ploj)s which every listener in the 
Keeps could hear. 

Sam thanked his audience. He 
asked their patience for a few days 
longer, until the first examination 
trials could be set up. He observed 
with arrogant humility that he hoped 
to earn their trust and faith by his 
service toward themselves and the 
Free Companion, who had left all 
such matters in his hands while Hale 
himself struggled up there on land- 
side in the jungles he knew so well. 
We would all, Sam finished, soon be 
watching such struggles, with men 
instead of monsters enlisting our 
sympathy in their brave attempts to 
conquer Venus as our forebears once 
conquered Old Earth . . . 

The Families did nothing. 

It worried Sam more than any di- 
rect action could possibly have done. 
For there was nothing here he could 
fight. Profoundly he distrusted that 
silence. All telecast attempts to in- 
terview any of the Immortals on this 
tremendous subject which was up- 
permost, overnight, in every mind, 
came to nothing. They would smile 
and nod and refuse to comment — 
yet. 

But the plans went on at break- 
neck rate. And after all, Sam told 
himself, what could the Harkers do? 



To deny the public this delightful 
new toy might be disastrous. You 
can’t give candy to a baby and then 
snatch it away untasted without 
rousing yells of protest. The people 
of the Keeps were much more for- 
midable than babies, and they were 
used to collapsing into paternalistic 
hands. Remove the support, and you 
might expect trouble. 

Sam knew he had won a gambit, 
not the game. But he had too much 
to do just now to let the future 
worry him. All this was to be a 
swindle, of course. He had never 
intended anything else. 

Paradoxically, Sam trusted the 
judgment of the Harkers. They 
thought this attempt would fail. Sam 
was sure they were right. Of course 
the Logician believed that colonizing 
wonld succeed, and the Logician nor- 
mally should be right. How can a 
machine err? But the machine had 
erred, very badly, in its analysis of 
Sam himself, so it isn’t strange that 
he disbelieved all its conclusions 
now. 

The only way to make the scheme 
succeed as Sam intended it to suc- 
ceed was to insure its failure. Sam 
was out this time for really big 
money. The public clamored to buy, 
and Sam sold and sold. 

He sold three hundred per cent i f 
the stock. 

After that he had to fail. If he 
put the money into landside devel- 
opment there’d be nothing left over 
for the promoter, and anyhow, how 
could he pay off on three hundred 
per cent ? 

But on paper it looked beautiful. 
New sources of supply and demand, 



ASTOUXDIKG SCIEKCK-FICT ION 



a booming culture rising from the 
underseas, shaking off the water 
from gigantic shoulders, striding 
onto the shore. And then interplan- 
etary and interstellar travel for the 
next goal, yld astra was a glorious 
dream, and Sam worked it for all it 
was worth. 

Two months went by. 

Rosathe, like all the other fruits 
of .success, dropped delightfully into 
his arms. Sam closed all three of his 
apartments and with Rosathe found 
a new place, full of undreamed of 
luxuries, its windows opening out 
over the hydroponic garden that 
flourished as lavishly, though not so 
dangerously, as the jungles over- 
head. From these windows he could 
see the lights of the whole Keep 
spread out below, where every man 
danced to his piping. It was dream- 
like, full of paranoid splendors, 
megalomaniac grandeur — ^and all of 
it true. 

Sam didn’t realize it yet, though 
looking back he would surely have 
seen, but he was spinning' faster and 
faster down a vortex of events which 
by now were out of his control. 
Events would have blurred as they 
whirled by, if he had been given time 
enough to look back at them when 
the moment of reckoning came. But 
he was not given time . . . 

Rosathe was sitting on a low has- 
sock at his feet, her harp on her arm, 
singing very sweetly to him, when 
the moment finally came. 

Her violet-blue skirts lay about her 
in a circle on the floor, her cloudy 
head was bent above the high horns 



of the lyre and her voice was very 
soft. 

“Oh, slowly, slowly got she up, and 
slowly she came nigh . . . him. . . .” 
How delightfully the sweet voice 
soared on the last word! That dip 
and rise in the old ballads tried every 
voice but an instrument as true as 
the lovely instrument in Rosathe’s 
throat. “But all she said” — Rosathe 
reported in that liquid voice — and 
was stopped by the musical buzzing 
of the televisor. . 

Sam knew it must be important, 
or it would never have been put 
through to him at this hour. Reluc- 
tantly he swung his feet to the floor 
and got up. 

Rosathe did not lift her head. She 
sat quite motionless for an instant, 
curiously as if she had been frozen 
by the sound of the buzzer. Then 
without glancing up she swept the 
strings with polished fingertips and 
sang her final line. “Young man, I 
think you're dyin’ . . 

The cloudiness of the visor screen 
cleared as Sam flipped the switch 
and a face swam out of it that rocked 
him back a bit on his heels. It was 
Kedre Walton’s face, and she was 
very angry. The black ringlets 
whipped like Medusa-locks as she 
whirled her head toward the screen. 
She must have been talking to some- 
one in the background as she waited 
for Sam to acknowledge the call, for 
her anger was not wholly for Sam. 
He could see that. Her words be- 
lied it. 

“Sam Reed, you’re a fool!” she 
told him flatly and without preamble. 
The Egyptian calm was gone from 
her delicate, disdainful face. Even 



FUKT 



47 



the disdain was gone now. “Did you 
really think you could get away with 
all this?” 

“I’ve got away with it,” Sam as- 
sured her. He was very confident at 
that point in the progress of his 
scheme. ^ 

“You poor fool, you’ve never 
fought an Immortal before. Our 
plans work slowly. We can afford 
to be slow! But surely you didn’t 
imagine Zachariah Marker would let 
you do what you did and live ! He — ” 

A voice from behind her said, “Let 
me speak for myself, Kedre, my 
dear,” and the smooth, ageless young 
face of Zachariah looked out at Sam 
from the screen. The eyes were 
quietly speculative as they regarded 
him. “In a way I owe you thanks, 
Reed,” the Immortal’s voice said. 
“You were clever. You had more 
resources than I expected. You put 
my on my mettle, and that’s an un- 
expected pleasure. Also, you've made 
it possible for me to overthrow 
Hale’s whole ambitious project. So 
I want to thank you for that, too. I 
like to be fair when I can afford 
to be.” 

His eyes were the eyes of a man 
looking at something so impersonally 
that Sam felt a sudden chill. Such 
remoteness in time and space and ex- 
perience — as if Sam were not there 
at aH. Or as if Marker were looking 
already on death. Something as im- 
personal and remote from living as a 
corpse. As Sam Reed. 

And Sam knew a moment’s pro- 
found shaking of his own convic- 
tions — he had a flash of insight in 
which he thought that perhaps Mar- 
ker had planned it this way from the 

48 



start, knowing that Sam would 
doublecross him with Hale, and 
knowing, that Sam woidd double- 
cross Hale, too. Sam was the weak 
link in Hale’s crusade, the one thing 
that might bring the whole thing 
crashing if anyone suspected. Until 
now, Sam had been sure no one did 
suspect. 

But Zachariah Marker knew. 

“Good-by, Reed,” the smooth voice 
said. “Kedre, my dear — ” 

Kedre’s face came back into the 
screen. She was still angry, but the 
anger had been swallowed up in an- 
other emotion as her eyes met Sam’s. 
The long lashes half veiled them, and 
there were tears on the lashes. 

“Good-by, Sam,” she said. “Good- 
by.” And the blue glance flickered 
across his shoulder. 

Sam had one moment to turn and 
see what was coming, but not time 
enough to stop it. For Rosathe 
stood at his shoulder, watching the 
screen, too. And as he turned her 
pointed fingers which had evoked 
music from the harp for him this 
evening pinched together suddenly 
and evoked oblivion. 

He felt the sweet, terrifying odor 
of dust stinging in his nostrils. He 
stumbled forward futilely, reaching 
for her, meaning to break her neck. 
But she floated away before him, and 
the whole room floated, and then Ro- 
sathe was looking down on him from 
far above, and there were tears in 
her eyes, too. 

The fragrance of dream-dust 
blurred everything else. Dream-dust, 
the narcotic euthanasia dirst which 
was the way of the suicide. 

His last vision was the sight of 

ASTOUNDING SC I ENCE-U I OT TO N 



the tcar-wei eves looking down, two 
vTomen who must have loved him to 
evoke tliose tears, and who together 
had worked out his ruin. 

Pie woke. The smell of scented 
dust died from his nostrils. It was 
dark here. He felt a wall at his 
shoulder, and got up stiffly, i)racing 
himself against it. Light showed 
hlurrily a little way off. P'hc end of 
an alley, he thought. People were 
passing now and then through the 
dimness out there. 

The alley hurt his feet. His shoes 
felt queer and loose. Investigating, 
Sam found that he was in rags, his 
hare feet pressing the pavement 
through broken soles. And the fra- 
grance of dream-dust was still a mi- 
asma in the air around him. 

Dream-dust — that could put a man 
to sleep for a long, long while, //ow 
long! 

He stumbled toward the mouth of 
the alley. A passer-by glanced at 
him with curiosity and distaste. He 
reached out and collared the man. 



"The Colony,” he said urgently. 
‘‘Has it — have they opened it yet ?” 

The man struck his arm away. 
■‘What colony?” he asked impa- 
tiently. 

‘‘The Colony ! The I-and Colony !” 

‘‘Oh, that.” The man laughed. 
“You’re a little lite.” Clearly he 
thought Sam was drunk. “It’s been 
open a long time now — what’s left 
of it.” 

‘■plow long?^’ 

‘‘Forty years.” 

Sam hung on the bar of a vending 
machine in the wall at the alley 
mouth. He had to hold the bar to 
keep hiniself upright, for his knees 
were strengthless beneath him. Pie 
was looking into the dusty mirror 
and into his own eyes. “I'orty years. 
P'orty years !” And the ageless, un- 
changed face of Sam Harker looked 
back at him, ruddy-browed, unlined 
as ever. 

“Forty years!” Sam Harker mur- 
mured to himself. 



TO BE CONTINUED. 



IN TIMES TO COME 

Next month features an A. E. van Vogt yarn, “Centaurus II.” It’s the 
skillful piece of work you expect from van Vogt — and an interesting back- 
ground theme, considering the political wanderings of an isolated colony of 
men. But there’s another item you’ll -find highly interesting about that next 
issue — the cover is by Sclmeeman; the black and whites for “Centaurus II” 
are Schneeman’s, too. 

Gradually, bit by bit, wc’rc getting back the old gang from one place and 
another. Schneeman, incidentally, came back via our sister magazine, AIR 
TRAILS AND SCIENCE FRONTIERS. R. S. Richardson has an article 
“Forty Steps To The Moon” coming up, with Schneeman illustrations. And, 
of interest to science-fictionoers, AIR TRAILS AND SCIENCE FRONTIERS 
is running in its current May issue, an article “Fortress In The .Sky.” It’s a 
discussion of the military potentialities of a Lunar base. 

The Editor. 



h'UHT 



49 



BY THEODORE STORGEON 




Tiny wasn’t liny — but the mon- 
ster teas definitely horrific. Tiny, 
on the other hand, displayed a 
quite incredible intelligence for 
a dog, after one encounter — 



Illustrated by Cartier 



TINY AND THE MONSTER 



She had to find out about Tiny — 
everything about Tiny. 

They were bound to call him Tiny. 
The name was good for a laugh 
when he was a pup, and many times 
afterward. 

He was a Great Dane, unfashion- 
able with his long tail, smooth and 
glossy in the brown coat which fit 
so snugly over his heavily muscled 
shoulders and chest. His eyes were 

50 



big and brown and his feet were big 
and black ; he had a voice like thun- 
der and a heart ten times his own 
great size. 

He was born in the Virgin Islands, 
on St. Croix, which is a land of palm 
trees and sugar, of soft winds and 
luxuriant undergro%vth whispering 
with the stealthy passage of pheasant 
and mongoose. There were rats in 
the ruins of the ancient estate houses 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-iriCT KIN 




which stood among the foothills — 
— ruins with slave-built walls forty 
inches thick, and great arches of 
weathered stone. There was pasture 
land where the field mice ran, and 
brooks asparkle with gaudy blue 
minnows. 

But — where in St. Croix had he 
learned to be so strange ? 

When Tiny was a puppy, all feet 
and ears, he learned many things. 
Most of these things were kinds of 
respect. He learned to respect that 
swift, vengeful -piece of utter engi- 
neering called a scorpion, when one 
of them whipped its barbed tail into 
his inquiring nose. He learned to 
respect the heavy deadness of the air 
about him which preceded a hurri- 
cane, for he knew that it meant 
hurry and hammering and utmost 
obedience from every creature on 
the estate. He learned to respect the 
justice of sharing, for he was pulled 
from the teat and from the trough 
when he crowded the others of his 
litter. He was the largest. 

These things, all of them, he 
learned as respects. He was never 
struck, and altliough he learned cau- 
tion he never learned fear. The pain 
he suffered from the scorpion — it 
only happened once — the strong 
but gentle hands which curbed his 
greed, the frightful violence of the 
hurricane which followed the tense 
preparations — all these things and 
inany more taught him the justice of 
respect. He half understood a basic 
ethic; namely, that he would never 
be asked to do something, or to re- 
frain from doing something, unless 
there were a good reason for it. His 
obedience, then, was a thing implicit. 



for it was half-reasoned; and since 
it was not based on fear, but on jus- 
tice, it could not interfere with his 
resourcefulness. 

All of which, along with his blood, 
explained why he was such a splen- 
did animal. It did not explain how 
he learned to read. It did not ex- 
plain why Alec was compelled to sell 
him — not only to sell him but to 
search out Alistair Forsythe and sell 
him to her. 

She had to find out. The whole 
thing was crazy. She hadn’t wanted 
a dog. If she had wanted a dog, it 
wouldn’t have been a Great Dane. 
And if it had been a Great Dane, it 
wouldn’t have been Tiny, for he was 
a Crucian dog and had to be shipped 
all the way to Scarsdale, New York 
by air. 

The series of letters she sent to 
Alec were as full of wondering per- 
suasion as his had been when he sold 
her the dog. It was through these 
letters that she learned about the 
scorpion and the hurricane ; about 
Tiny’s puppyhood and the way Alec 
brought up his dogs. If she learned 
something about Alec as well, that 
was understandable. Alec and Ali- 
stair Forsythe had never met, but 
through Tiny they shared a greater 
secret than many' people who have 
grown up together. 

“As for why I wrote you, of all 
people,” Alec wrote in answer to her 
direct question, “I can’t say I chose 
you at all. It was Tiny. One of the 
cruise-boat people mentioned your 
name at my place, over cocktails one 
afternoon. It was, as I remember, a 
Dr. Schwellenbach. Nice old fellow. 
As soon as your name was men- 



TINY AND THE MON.STEU 



61 



tioned, Tiny’s head came up as if I 
had called him. He got up from his 
station by the door and lolloped over 
to the doctor with his ears up and 
his nose quivering. I thought for a 
minute that the old fellow was offer- 
ing him food, but no — he must have 
wanted to hear Schw'ellenbach say 
your name again. So I asked about 
you. A day or so later I was telling 
a couple of friends about it, and 
when I mentioned the name again, 
Tiny came snuffling over and shoved 
his nose into my hand. He was shiv- 
ering. That got me. I wrote to a 
friend in New York who got your 
name and address in the phone Ijook. 
You know the rest. I just wanted 
to tell you about it at first, but some- 
thing made me suggest a sale. Some- 
how it didn’t seem right to have 
something like this going on and not 
have you meet Tiny. When you 
Wrote that you couldn’t get away 
from New York, there didn’t seem 
to be anything else to do but send 
Tiny to you. And now — I don’t 
know if I’m' too liappy about it. 
Judging from those pages and pages 
of questions you keep sending me, I 
get the idea that you are more than 
a little troubled by this crazy busi- 
ness.” 

She answered, “Please don’t think 
I’m troubled about this! I’m not. 
I’m interested, and curious, and more 
than a little excited; but there is 
nothing about the situation which 
frightens me. I can’t stress that 
enough. There’s something around 
Tiny — sometimes I have the feeling 
it’s something outside Tiny — which 
is infinitely comforting. I feel pro- 
tected, in a strange way, and it’s a 



different and greater thing than the 
protection I could expect from a 
large and intelligent dog. It’s strange, 
and it’s mysterious enough; but it 
isn’t at all frightening. 

“I have some more questions. Can 
you remember exactly what it was 
that Dr. Schwellenbach said the first 
time he mentioned my name and 
Tiny acted strangely ? Was there ever 
any time that you can remember, 
when Tiny was under some influence 
other than your own — something 
which might have given him these 
strange traits? What about his diet 
as a puppy? How many times did 
he get — ” and so on. 

And Alec answered, in part, “It 
was so long ago now that I can’t re- 
member exactly ; but it seems to me 
Dr. Schwellenbach was talking about 
his work. As you know, he’s a pro- 
fessor of metallurgy. He mentioned 
Professor Nowland as the greatest 
alloy specialist of his time — said 
Nowland could alloy anything with 
anything. Then he went on about 
No wland’s assistant. Said the assist- 
ant was very highly qualified, having 
been one of these Science Search 
products and something of a prod- 
igy, in spite of which she was com- 
pletely feminine and as beautiful a 
redhead as had ever exchanged 
heaven for earth. Then he said her 
name was Alistair Forsythe. (I hope 
you’re not blushing. Miss Forsythe; 
you asked for this!) And then it 
was that Tiny ran over to the doctor 
in that extraordinary way. 

“The only time I can think of 
when Tiny was off the estate and 
possibly under some influence was 



ASTOUNDINO RCIKKOE-PICTIOX 



the day old Debbil disappeared for a 
whole day with the pup when he was 
about three months old. Debbil is 
one of the characters who hang 
around here. He’s a Crucian about 
sixty years old, a piratical-looking 
old gent with one eye and elephanti- 
asis. He shuffles around the grounds 
running odd errands for anyone who 
will give him tobacco or a shot of 
white rum. Well, one morning I sent 
him over the hill to see if there was 
a leak in the water line that runs 
from the reservoir. It would only 
take a couple of hours, so I told him 
to take Tiny for a run. 

“They were gone for the whole 
day. I was short handed and busy 
as a squirrel in a nuthouse and didn’t 
have a chance to send anyone after 
him. But he drifted in towards eve- 
ning. I bawled him out thorough- 
ly. It was no use asking him where 
he had been ; he’s only about quarter- 
witteA anyway. He jus*- claimed he 
couldn’t remember, which is pretty 
usual for him. But for the next three 
days I was busy with Tiny. He 
wouldn’t eat, and he hardly slept at 
all. He just kept staring out over 
the canefields at the hill. He didn’t 
seem -to want to go there at all. I 
went out to have a look. There’s 
nothing out that way but the reser- 
voir and the old ruins of the gover- 
nor’s palace, which have been rotting 
out there in the sun for the last cen- 
tury and a half. Nothing left now 
but an overgrown mound and a 
couple of arches, but it’s supposed to 
be haunted. I forgot about it after 
that because Tiny got back to nor- 
mal. As a matter of fact, he seemed 
to be better than ever, although, from 

TINY AND THK MONSTER 



then on, he would sometimes freeze 
and watch the hill as if he were lis- 
tening to something. I haven’t at- 
tached much importance to it until 
now. I still don’t. Maybe he got 
chased by some mongoose’s mother. 
Maybe he chewed up some ganja- 
weed — marijuana to you. But I 
doubt that it has anything to do with,, 
the way he acts now, any more than 
that business of the compasses which 
pointed west might have something 
to do with it. Did you hear about 
that, by the way? Craziest thing I 
ever heard of. It was right after I 
shipped Tiny off to you last fall, as 
I remember. Every ship and boat 
and plane from here to Sandy Hook 
reported that its compass began to 
indicate due west instead of a mag- 
netic north! Fortunately the effeqt 
only lasted a couple of hours so there 
were no serious difficulties. One 
cruise steamer ran aground, and 
there were a couple of Miami fish- 
ing boat mishaps. I only bring it up 
to remind both of us that Tiny’s be- 
havior may be odd, but not exclu- 
sively so in a world where such 
things as the crazy compasses occur.” 
And in her next, she wrote, 
“You’re quite the philosopher, aren’t 
you ? Be careful of that Fortean at- 
titude, my tropical friend. It tends 
to accept the idea of the unexplain- 
able to an extent where explaining, 
or even investigating, begins to look 
useless. As far as that crazy com- 
pass episode is concerned, I remem- 
ber it well indeed. My boss. Dr. 
Nowland — yes, it’s true, he can al- 
loy anything with anything ! — has 
been up to the ears in that fantastic 
happenstance. So have m«^ of his 

58 



colleagues in half a dozen sciences. 
They’re able to explain it quite satis- 
factorily, too. It was simply the 
presence of some quasi-magnetic 
phenomenon which created a result- 
ant field at right angles to the Earth’s 
own magnetic influences. That solu- 
tion sent the pure theorists home 
happy. Of course, the practical ones 
— Nowland and his associates in 
metallurgy, for example — have only 
to figure out what caused the field. 
Science is a wonderful thing. 

“By the way, you will notice my 
change of address. 1 have wanted 
for a long time to have a little house 
of my own, and I was lucky enough 
to get this diie from a friend. It’s 
up the Hud.son from New York, 
quite countrified but convenient 
enough to the city to be practical. 
Pm bringing Mother here from up- 
state. She’ll love it. And besides— 
as if you didn’t know the most im- 
portant reason when you saw it ! — it 
gives Tiny a place to run. He’s no 
city dog. ... I’d tell you that he 
found the house for me, too, if I 
didn’t think that, these days. I’m 
crediting him with even more than 
his remarkable powers. Gregg and 
Marie Weems, the couple who had 
the cottage l3efore, began to be 
haunted. So they said, any way. Some 
indescribably horrible monster that 
both of them caught glimpses of, in- 
side the house and out of it. Marie 
finally got the screaming meemies 
about it and insisted on Gregg’s sell- 
ing the place, housing shortage or no. 
They came straight to me. Why? 
Because they — Marie, anyway ; she’s 
a mystic little thing — had the idea 
that someone with a large dog would 



he safe in that house. The odd part 
of that was that neither of them 
knew I had recently acquired a Great 
Dane. As soon as they saw Tiny 
they threw themselves on my neck 
and begged me to take the place. 
Marie couldn’t explain the feeling 
she had ; what she and Gregg came 
to my place' for was to ask me to buy 
a big dog and take the house. Why 
me? Well, she just felt I would like 
it, that was all. It seemed the right 
kind of a place for me. And my 
having the dog clinched it. Anyway, 
you can put that down in your note- 
lx)ok of unexplainables,’’ 

So it went for the better part of a 
year. The letters were long and fre- 
quent, and, as sometimes happens, 
Alec and Alistair grew very close in- 
deed. Almost by accident they found 
themselves writing letters which did 
not mention Tiny at all, although 
there were others which concerned 
nothing else. And, of course, Tiny 
was not always in the role of canis 
superior. He was a dog — ^all dog — 
and acted accordingly. His strange- 
ness only came out at particular in- 
tervals. At first it had been at times 
when Alistair was most susceptible 
to being astonished by it — in other 
words, when it was least expected. 
Later he would perform his odd 
feats when she was ready for him 
to do it, and under exactly the right 
circumstances. Later still, he only 
became the super-dog when she 
asked him to . . . 

The cottage was on a hillside, such 
a very steep hillside that the view 
which looked over the river over- 
looked the railroad, and the trains 



5 « 



ASTOUNDIXG SCIRXCK-FICTION 



were a secret rumble and never a 
sight at all. There was a wild and 
clean air about the place — a perpet- 
ual tingle of expectancy, as though 
someone coming into New York for 
the very first time on one of the 
trains had thrown his joyous antici- 
pation high in the air, and the cottage 
had caught it and breathed it and 
kept it forever. 

Up the hairpin driveway to the 
house, one spring afternoon, toiled a 
miniature automobile in its lowest 
gear. Its little motor grunted and 
moaned as it took the last steep 
grade, a miniature Old Faithful ap- 
pearing around its radiator cap. At 
the foot of the brownstone porch 
steps, it stopped, and a miniature 
lady slid out from under the wheel. 
But for the fact that she was wear- 
ing an aviation mechanic’s covei'alls, 
and that her very first remark — an 
earthy epithet directed at the steam- 
ing radiator — was neither ladylike 
nor miniature, she might have been 
a model for the more precious vari- 
ety of Mother’s Day greeting card. 

Fuming, she reached into the car 
and pressed the horn button. The 
cjuavering ululation which resulted 
had its desired effect. It was an- 
swered instantly by the mighty howl 
of a Great Dane at the peak of 
aural agony. The door of the house 
crashed open, and a girl rushed out 
on the porch, to stand with her rus- 
set hair ablaze in the sunlight, her 
lips parted, and her long eyes squint- 
ing against the light reflected from 
the river. “What — Mother! Mother, 
darling ... is that you? Already? 
Tiny 1” she rapped as the dog bolted 

TINY AND THE MONSTER 



out of the open door and down the 
steps. “Come back here !’’ 

The dog stopped. Mrs. Fors>-the 
scooped a crescent wrench from the 
ledge behind the driver’s seat and 
brandished it. “Let him come, Ali- 
stair,” she said grimly. “In the name 
of sense, girl, what are you doing 
with a monster like that ? I thought 
you said you had a dog, not a Shet- 
land pony with fangs. If he messes 
with me. I’ll separate him from a 
couple of those twelve-pound feet 
and bring him down to my weight. 
Where do you keep his saddle? I 
thought there was a meat shortage in 
this part o-f the country. Whatever 
possessed you to take up your abode 
with that carniverous dromedary, 
anyway? And what’s the idea of 
buying a barn like this, thirty miles 
from nowhere and perched on a 
precipice to boot, with a stepladder 
for a driveway and an altitude fit to 
boil water at eighty degrees centi- 
grade? It must take you forever 
to make breakfast. Twenty-minute 
eggs, and then they’re raw. I’m hun- 
gry. If that Danish basilisk hasn’t 
eaten everything in sight. I’d like to 
nibble on about eight sandwiches. 
Salami on whole wheat. Your flow- 
ers are gorgeous, child. So are you. 
You always were, of course. Pity 
you have brains. If you had no 
brains, you’d get married. A lovely 
view, honey, lovely. I like it here. 
Glad you bought it. Come here, you.” 
she said to Tiny. 

He approached this small specimen 
of volubility with his head a little 
low and his tail down. She extended 
a hand and held it still to let him 
sniff it before she thumped him on 

65 



the withers. He waved life unfash- 
ionable tail in acceptance and then 
went to join the laughing Alistair, 
who was coming down the steps. 

“Mother, you’re marvelous. And 
you haven’t changed a bit.’’ She bent 
and kissed her. “What on earth 
made that awful noise?” 

“Noise? Oh — the horn.” Mrs. 
Forsythe busily went about lifting 
the hood of the car. “I have a friend 
in the shoelace business. Wanted to 
.stimulate trade for him. Fixed this 
up to make people jump out of their 
shoes. When they jump they break 
the laces. Leave their shoes in the 
street. Thousands of people walking 
about in their stocking feet. More 
people ought to anyway. Good for 
the arches.” She pointed. There 
were four big air-driven horns 
mounted on and around the little 
motor. Over the mouth of each was 
a shutter, so arranged that it re- 
volved about an axle which was set 
at right angles to the horn, so that 
the bell was opened and closed by 
four small DC motors. “That’s what 
gives it the warble. As for the beat- 
note, the four of them are tuned a 
sixteenth-tone apart. Pretty ?” 

“Pretty,” Alistair conceded with 
sincerity. “No — please don’t demon- 
strate it again, Mother ! You almost 
wrenched poor Tiny’s ears off the 
first time.” 

“Oh — did I ?” Contritely, she went 
to the dog. “I didn’t mean to, honey- 
poodle, really I didn’t.” The honey- 
poodle looked up at her with somber 
brown eyes and thumped his tail on 
the ground. “I like him,” said Mrs. 
Forsythe decisively. She put out a 
fearless hand and pulled aflection- 



ately at the loose flesh of Tiny's 
upper lip. “Will you look at those 
tusks! Great day in the morning, 
dog, reel in some of that tongue or 
you’ll turn yourself inside out. Why 
aren’t you married yet, chicken ?” 

“Why aren’t you?” Alistair 
countered. 

Mrs. Forsythe stretched. “Fve 
been married,” she said, and Alistair 
knew now her casualness was forced. 
“A married season with the likes of 
Dan Forsythe sticks with you.” Her 
voice softened. “Your daddy was all 
kinds of good people, baby.” She 
shook herself. “Let’s eat. I want to 
hear al)out Tiny. Your driblets and 
drablets of information about that 
dog are as tantalizing as Chapter 
Eleven of a movie serial. Who’s this 
Alec creature in St. Croix? Some 
kind of native — cannibal, or some- 
thing? He sounds nice. I wonder 
if you know how nice you think he 
is? Good heavens, the girl’s blush- 
ing! I only know what I read in 
your letters, darling, and I never 
knew you to quote anyone by the 
paragraph before but that old scoun- 
drel Nowland, and that was all about 
ductility and permeability and melt- 
ing points. Metallurgy ! A girl like 
you niucking about with molybs and 
durals instead of heartbeats and hope 
chests !” 

“Mother, sweetheart, hasn’t it oc- 
curred to you at all that I don’t want 
to get married ? Not yet, anyway.” 

“Of course it has! That doesn’t 
alter the fact that a woman is only 
forty per cent a woman until some- 
one loves her, and only eighty per 
cent a woman until she has children. 

SCIKXPK-PICTION 




As for you and your precious career, 
I seem to remember something about 
a certain Marie Slodowska who 
didn’t mind marrying a fellow called 
Curie, science or no science.” 

“Darling,” said Alistair a little 
tiredly, as they mounted the steps 
and went into the cool house, “once 
and for all, get this straight. The 
career, as such, doesn’t matter at all. 
The work does. I like it. I don’t 
see the sense in being married purely 
for the sake of being married.” 

“Oh, for heaven’s sake, child, nei- 
ther do I !” said Mrs. Forsythe quick- 
ly. Then, ca.sting a critical eye over 
her daughter, she sighed, “But it’s 
such a waste!” 

“What do }'ou mean?” 

Her mother shook her head. “If 
you don’t get it, it’s because there’s 
sotuetliing wrong with your sense of 
values ; in which case there’s no point 
in arguing. I love your furniture. 
Now for pity’s sake feed me and 



tell me about this canine Camera of 
yours.” 

Moving deftly about the kitchen 
while her mother perched like a 
bright-eyed bird on a utility ladder, 
Alistair told the story of her letters 
from Alec, and Tiny’s arrival. 

“At first he was just a dog. A 
very wonderful dog, of course, arid 
extremely well trained. We got along 
beautifully. There was nothing re- 
markable about him but his history, 
as far as I could see, and certainly 
no indication of ... of anything. I 
mean, he might have responded to 
my name the way he did because the 
syllabic content pleased him.” 

“It should,” said her mother com- 
placently. “Dan and I spent weeks 
at a sound laboratory graphing a 
suitable name for you. Alistair For- 
sythe. Has a beat, you know. Keej) ■ 
that in mind when you change it.” 
“Mother !” 



TINY AND THE MONSTER 



87 



*‘AU right, dear. Go on with the 
story.” 

“For all I knew, the whole thing 
was a crazy coincidence. Tiny didn’t 
responcl particularly to the sound of 
my name after he got here. He 
seemed to take a perfectly normal, 
doggy pleasure in sticking around, 
that was all. 

“Then, one evening after he liad 
l)een with me about a month, I found 
out he could read.” 

“Read!” Mrs. Forsythe toppled, 
clutched the edge of the sink, and 
righted herself. 

“Well, practically that. I used to 
study a lot in the evenings, and Tiny 
used to stretch out in front of the 
fire with his nose between his paws 
and watch me. I was tickled by that. 
I even got the habit of talking to 
him while I studied. I mean, about 
the work. Fie always seemed to be 
paying very close attention, which, of 
course, was silly. And maybe it was 
my imagination, but the times he’d 
get up and nuzzle me always seemed 
to be the times when my mind was 
wandering, or when I would quit 
working and go on to something else. 

“This particular evening I was 
working on the permeability mathe- 
matics of certain of the rare-earth 
group. I put down my pencil and 
reached for my ‘Handbook of Chem- 
istry and Physics’ and found nothing 
but a big hole in the bookcase. The 
book wasn’t on the desk either. So 
I swung around to Tiny and said, 
just for something to say, ‘Tiny, 
what have you done with my hand- 
book ?’ 

“He went whuff! in the most star- 
tled tone of voice, leapt to his feet 



and went over to his bed. He turned 
up the mattress with his paw atid 
scooped out the book. He picked it 
up in his jaws — I wonder what he 
would have done if he were a Scot- 
ty? That’s a chunky piece of litera- 
ture I — and brought it to me. 

“I just didn’t know what to do. I 
took the book and riffled it. It was 
pretty well shoved around. Appar- 
ently he had been trying to leaf 
through it with those big splay feet 
of his. I put the book down and 
took him by the muzzle. I called 
him nine kinds of a rascal and asked 
him what he was looking for.” She 
])aused, building a sandwich. 

“Well?” 

“Oh,” said Alistair, as if coming 
back from a far distance. “He didn’t 
say.” 

There was a thoughtful silence. 
Finally Mrs. Forsythe looked up with 
her odd birdlike glance and said, 
“You’re kidding. That dog isn’t 
shaggy enough.” 

“You don’t Iielieve me.” It wasn’t 
a question. 

The older woman got up to put a 
hand on the girl’s shoulder, “Honey- 
lamb, your daddy used to say that 
the only things worth believing were 
things you learned from people you 
trusted. Of course I believe you. 
Thing is — do you believe you ?” 

“I’m not — sick, Mum, if that’s 
what you mean. Let me tell you the 
rest of it.” 

“You mean there’s more?” 

“Plenty more.” She put the stack 
of sandwiches on the .sideboard 
where her mother could reach it. 
Mrs. Forsythe fell to with a will. 
“Tiny has been goading me to do 



38 



ASTOUNDING .SCIKNCE-PICTION 



research. A particular kind of re- 
search.” 

“Hut hine uffefa ?” 

“Mother ! I didn’t give you those 
sandwiches only to feed you. . The 
idea was to soundproof you a bit, 
too, while I talked.” 

“Hohay!” said her mother cheer- 
fully. 

“Well, Tiny won’t let me work on 
any other project but the one he’s in- 
terested in. Mum, I can’t talk if 
you’re going to gape like that! No 
... I can’t say he won’t let me do 
any work. But there’s a certain line 
of endeavor which he approves. Iff 
do anything else, he snuffles around, 
joggles my elbow, grunts, whimpers, 
and generally carries on until I lose 
my temper and tell him to go away. 
Then he’ll walk over to the fireplace 
and flop down and sulk. Never takes 
his eyes off me. So, of course, I get 
all soft-hearted and repentant and 
apologize to him and get on with 
what he wants done.” 

Mrs. Forsythe swallowed, coughed, 
gulped some milk and exploded, 
“Wait a minute! You’re away too 
fast for me ! What is it that he wants 
done ? How do you know he wants 
it ? Can he read, or can’t he ? Make 
some sense, child !” 

Alistair laughed richly. “Poor 
Mum! I don’t blame you, darling. 
No, I don’t think he can really read. 
He shows no interest at all in books 
or pictures. The episode with the 
Handbook seemed to be an experi- 
ment that didn’t bring any results. 
But — he knows the difference be- 
tween my books, even books that are 
bound alike, even when I shift them 
around in the bookcase. Tiny !” 



The Great Dane scrambled to his 
feet from the corner of the kitchen, 
his paws skidding on the waxed lin- 
oleum. “Get me Hoag’s ‘Basic 
Radio’, old feller, will you ?” 

Tiny turned and padded out. They 
heard him going up the stairs. “I 
was afraid he wouldn’t do it while 
you were here,” she said. “He gen- 
erally warns me not to say anything 
about his powers. He growls. He 
did that when Dr. Nowland dropped 
out for lunch one Saturday. I started 
to talk about Tiny, and just couldn’t. 
He acted disgracefully. First he 
growled and then he barked. It was 
the first time I’ve ever known him 
to bark in the house. Poor Dr. Now- 
land ! He was scared half out of 
his wits!” 

Tiny thudded down the stairs and 
entered the kitchen. “Give it to 
Mum,” said Alistair. Tiny walked 
sedately over to the stool and stood 
before the astonished Mrs. Forsythe. 
She took the volume from his jaws. 

“ ‘Basic Radio’,” she breathed. 

“I asked him for that because I 
have a whole row of technical books 
up there, all from the same publish- 
er, all the same color and about the 
same size,” said Alistair calmly. 

“But . . . but . . . how does he 
do it?” 

Alistair shrugged. “I don’t know ! 
He doesn’t read the titles. That I'm 
sure of. He can’t read an3'thing. 
I’ve tried to get him to do it a dozen 
different ways. I’ve lettered instruc- 
tions on pieces of paper and shown 
them to him . . . you know . . . ‘Go 
to the door’ and ‘Give me a kiss’ and 
so on. He just looks at them and 



TINY AND THE MONSTER 



59 



wags his tail. But if I read them 
first—” 

“You mean, read them aloud?” 
“No. Oh . . . he’ll do anything I 
ask him to, sure. But I don’t have 
to say it. Just read it, and he turns 
and does it. That’s the way he makes 
me study what he wants studied.” 
“Are you telling me that that be- 
hemoth can read your mind?” 

“What do you think ? Here — I’ll 
show you. Give me the book.” 
Tiny’s ears went up. “There’s 
something in here about the electri- 
cal flux in super-cooled copper that 
I don’t quite remember. Let’s see if 
Tiny’s interested.” 

She sat on the kitchen table and 
began to leaf through the book. Tiny 
came and sat in front of her, his 
tongue lolling out, his big brown eyes 
fixed on her face. There was silence 
as she turned pages, read a little, 
turned some more. -And suddenly 
Tiny whimpered urgently. 

“See what I mean. Mum? All 
right. Tiny. I’ll read it over.” 
Silence again, while Alistair’s long 
green eyes traveled over the page. 
All at once Tiny stood up and nuz- 
zled her leg. 

“Hm-m-m? The reference? Want 
me to go back ?” 

Tiny sat again, expectantly. 
"There’s a reference here to a pass- 
age in the first section on basic elec- 
tric theory that he wants,” she ex- 
plained. She looked up. “Mother! 
You read it to him!” She jumped 
off the table, handed the book over. 
“Here. Section 45. Tiny ! Go listen 
to Mum. Go on!” and she shoved 
him toward Mrs. Forsythe, who said 
in an awed voice, “When 1 was a 

00 



little girl, I used to read bedtime sto- 
ries to my dolls. I thought I’d quit 
that kind of thing altogether, and 
now I’m reading technical literature 
to this . . . this canine catastrophe 
here. Shall I read aloud ?” 

“No — don’t. See if he gets it.” 
But Mrs. Forsythe didn’t get the 
chance. Before she had read two 
lines Tiny was frantic. He ran to 
Mrs. Forsythe and back to Alistair. 
He reared up like a frightened horse, 
rolled his eyes, and panted. He 
whimpered. He growled a little. 
“For pity’s sakes what’s wrong?” 
“I guess he can’t get it from you,” 
said Alistair. “I’ve had the idea be- 
fore that he’s tuned to me in more 
ways than one, and this clinches it. 
All right, then. Give me back the — ” 

But before she could ask him. Tiny 
had bounded to Mrs. Forsythe, taken 
the book gently out of her hands, 
and carried it to his mistress. Ali- 
stair smiled at her paling mother, took 
the book, and read until Tiny sud- 
denly seemed to lose interest. He went 
back to his station by the kitchen cab- 
inet and lay down yawning. 

“That’s that,” said Alistair, closing 
the book. “In other words, class dis- 
missed. Well, Mum?” 

Mrs. Forsythe opened her mouth, 
closed it again, and shook her head. 
Alistair loosed a peal of laughter. 

“Oh Mum, Mum,” she gurgled 
through her laughter, “History has 
been made. Mum darling, you’re 
speechless !” 

“I am not,” said Mrs. Forsythe 
gruffly. “I ... I think . . . well, what 
do you know! You’re right! 

When they had their breath back — 

.\STOCNmNG SCIENCE-FICTION 



3'es, Mrs. Farsj'the joined in, for Ali- 
stair’s statement was indeed true — 
Alistajf picked up the book and said, 
“Now look. Mum, it’s almost time 
for. my session with Tiny. Oh yes; 
it’s a regular thing, and he certainly 
is leading me into some fascinating 
bvways.’’ 

'“Like what?” 

“Like the old impossible problem 
of casting tungsten, for example. 
You know, there is a way to do it.” 
“You don’t say! What do you 
cast it in — a play?” 

Alistair wrinkled her straight nose. 
“Did you ever hear of pressure ice? 
Water compressed until it forms a 
solid at what is usually its boiling 
point ?” 

“I remember some such.” 

“Well, all you need is enough pres- 
sure, and a chamber which can take 
that kind of pressure, and jp'couple 
of details like a high-intensity field 
of umpteen megacycles phased with 
. . . I forget the figures; anyhow, 
that’s the way to go about it.” 

“Tf we had some eggs we could 
have some ham and eggs if we had 
some ham,’ ” quoted Mrs. Forsythe. 
“And besides, I seem to remember 
something about that pressure ice 
melting pretty much right now, like 
so,” and she snapped her fingers. 
“How do you know your molded 
tung.sten — that’s what it would be, 
not cast at all — wouldn’t change state 
the same way ?” 

“That’s what I’m working on 
now,” said Alistair calmly. “Come 
along. Tiny. Mum, you can find your 
way around all right, can’t you ? If 
you need anything, just sing out. 
This isn’t a seance, you know.” 

TINY AND THE MONSTER 



“Isn’t it, though ?” muttered Mrs. 
Forsythe as her lithe daughter and 
the dog bounded up the stairs. She 
shook her head, went into the kitch- 
en, drew a bucket of water and car- 
ried it down to her car, which had 
cooled to a simmer. She was dash- 
ing careful handfuls of it onto the 
radiator, before beginning to pour, 
when her quick ear caught the 
scrunching of boots on the steep 
drive. 

She looked up to see a young man 
trudging wearily in the mid-morning 
heat. He wore an old sharkskin suit 
and carried his coat. In spite of his 
wilted appearance, his step was firm 
and his golden hair was crisp in the 
sunlight. He swung up to Mrs. For- 
sythe and gave her a grin, all deep- 
blue ty£s and good teeth. “For- 
sythe’s?” he asked, in a resonant 
baritone. 

“That’s right,” said Mrs. Forsythe, 
finding that she had to turn her head 
from side to side to see both of his 
shoulders. And yet she and he could 
swap belts. “You must feel like the 
Blue Kangaroo here,” she added, 
slapping her miniature mount on its 
broiling flank. “Boiled dry.” 

“You cahl de cyah de Bluq Kanga- 
roo?” he repeated, draping his coat 
over the door and mopping his fore- 
head with what seemed to Mrs. For- 
sythe’s discerning eye, a pure linen 
handkerchief. 

“I do,” she replied, forcing herself 
not to comment on the young man’s 
slight but strange accent. “It’s strictlj' 
a dry-clutch job, and acts like a cas- 
tellated ene. Let the pedal out, she 
races. Let it out three-thirty-seconds 
of an inch more and you’re gone 

61 



from there. Always stopping to walk 
back and pick up your head. Snaps 
right off, you know. Carry a bottle 
of collodion and a couple of splints 
to put your head back on. Starve to 
death • without a head to eat with. 
What brings you here ?” 

In answer he held out a yellow en- 
velope, looking solemnly at her head 
and neck, then at the car, his face 
quiet, his eyes crinkling with a huge 
enjoyment. 

Mrs. Forsythe glanced at the en- 
velope. “Qh. Telegram. She’s in- 
side. I’ll give it to her. Come on 
in and have a drink. It’s hotter than 
the hinges of Hail Columbia, Happy 
Land. Don’t go to wiping your feet 
like that ! By jeepers, that’s enough 
to give you an inferiority complex! 
Invite a man in, invite the dust on 
his feet, too. It’s good honest 'dirt and 
we don’t run to white broadlooms 
here. Are you afraid of dogs ?” 

The young man laughed. “Dahgs 
talk to me, ma’m.” 

She glanced at him sharply, opened 
her mouth to tell him he might just 
be taken at his word around here, 
then thought better of it. “Sit down,’’ 
she ordered. She bustled up a foam- 
ing* glass of beer and set it beside 
him. “I’ll get her down to sign for 
the wire,” she said. The man half 
lowered the glass into which he had 
been jowls-deep, began to speak, 
found he was alone in the room, 
laughed suddenly and richly, wiped 
off the mustache of suds and dove 
down for a new one. 

Mrs. Forsythe grinned and shook 
her head as she heard the laughter, 
and went straight to Alistait^s study. 
“Alistair!” 



“Stop pushing me about the ductil- 
ity of tungsten. Tiny! You know 
better than that. Figures are figures, 
and facts are facts. I think I see 
what you’re trying to lead me to. 
All I can say is that if such a thing 
is possible, I never heard of any 
equipment that could handle it. Stick 
around a few years and I’ll hire you 
a nuclear power plant. Until then, 
I’m afraid that — ” 

“Alistair!” 

“ — there just isn’t . . . hm-m-m? 
Yes, Mother?” 

“Telegram.” 

“Oh. Who from?” 

“I don’t know, being only one for- 
tieth of one per cent as psychic as 
that doghouse Dunninger you have 
there. In other words, I didn’t open 
it.” 

“Oh, Mum, you’re silly! Of 
course ^ou could have ... oh well, 
let’s have it.” 

“I haven’t got it. It’s downstairs 
with Discobolus Junior, who brought 
it. No one,” she said ecstatically, 
“has a right to be so tanned with 
hair that color.” 

“What are you talking about ?” 
“Go on down and sign for the tel- 
egram and see for yourself. You 
will find the maiden’s dream with his 
golden head in a bucket of suds, all 
hot and sweaty from his noble ef- 
forts in attaining this peak without 
spikes or alpenstock, with nothing 
but his pure heart and Western 
Union to guide him.” 

“This maiden’s dream happens to 
be tungsten treatment,” said Alistair 
with some irritation. She looked 
longingly at her worksheet, put down 
her pencil and rose. “Stay here. Tiny. 



•a 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



I’ll be right back as soon as I have 
successfully resisted my conniving 
mother’s latest scheme to drag my 
red hairing across some young buck’s 
path to matrimony.” She paused at 
the door. “Aren’t you staying up 
here, Mum?” 

“Get that hair away from your 
face,” said her mother grimly. “I am 
not. 1 wouldn’t miss this for the 
world. And don’t pun in front of 
that young man. It’s practically the 
only thing in the world I consider 
vulgar.” 

Alistair led the way down the 
stairs and through the corridor to 
the kitchen, with her mother crowd- 
ing her heels, once fluffing out her 
daughter’s blazing hair, once taking 
a swift tuck in the back of the girl’s 
halter. They spilled through the door 
almost together. Alistair stopped 
and frankly stared. 

For the young man had risen, and, 
•Still with the traces of beer foam on 
his modeled lips, stood with his jaws 
stupidly open, his head a little back, 
his eyes partly closed as if against a 
bright light. And it seemed as if 
everyone in the room forgot to 
breathe for a moment. 

“Well!” Mrs. Forsythe e.xploded 
after a moment. “Honey, you’ve 
made a conquest. Hey — you! Chin 
up ! Chest out !” 

“I beg your humble pardon,” mut- 
tered the young man ; and the phrase 
seemed more a colloquialism than an 
aft’ectation. 

Alistair, visibly pulling herself to- 
gether, said, “Mother 1 Please !” and 
drifted forward to pick up the tele- 
gram which lay on the kitchen table. 



Her mother knew her well enough to 
realize that her hands and her eyes 
were steady only by a powerful ef- 
fort. Whether the effort was in con- 
trol of annoyance, embarrassment or 
out-and-out biochemistry was a mat- 
ter for later thought. At the moment 
she was enjoying it tremendously. 

“Please wait,” said Alistair coolly. 
“There may be an answer to this.” 
The young man simply bobbed his 
head. He was still a little wall-eyed 
with the impact of seeing Alistair, as 
many a young man had been before. 
But there were the beginnings of his 
astonishing smile around his lips as 
he watched her rip the envelope open. 

“Mother! Listen! 

“ARRIVED THIS MORNING AND 
HOPE I CAN CATCH YOU AT 
HOME, OLD DEBBIL KILLED 
IN ACCIDENT BUT FOUND HIS 
MEMORY BEFORE HE DIED. 
HAVE INFORMATION WHICH 
MAY CLEAR UP THE MYSTERY— 
OR DEEPEN IT. HOPE I CAN SEE 
YOU FOR I DON’T KNOW WHAT 
TO THINK. 

ALEC.” 

“How old is this tropical savage?” 
asked Mrs. Forsythe. 

“He’s not a savage and I don’t 
know how old he is and I can’t see 
what that has to do with it. I think 
he’s about my age or a little older.” 
She looked up, and her eyes were 
shining. 

“Deadly rival,” said Mrs. Forsythe 
to the messenger consolingly. “Rot- 
ten timing here, somewhere.” 

“I — ” said the young man. 

“Mother, we’ve got to fix some- 
thing to eat. Do you suppose he’ll 
be able to stay over? Where’s my 



TINT AND THE MONSTER 



63 




S4 



ASTOUNDING SCIBNCK-PICTION 



% 



green dress with the . . . oh, you 
wouldn’t know. It’s new.” 

“Then the letters weren’t all about 
the dog,” said Mrs. Forsythe, with a 
Cheshire grin. 

“Mum, you’re impossible ! This is 
... is important. Alec is . . . is — ” 
Her mother nodded. “Important. 
That’s all I was pointing out.” 

The young man said, “I — ” 
Alistair turned to him. “I do hope 
you don’t think we’re totally mad. 
I’m sorry you had such a climb.” 
She went to the sideboard and took 
a quarter out of a sugar bowl. He 
took it gravely. 

“Thank you, ma’m. If you don’t 
min’. I’ll keep this piece of silver for 
the rest o’ my everlahstin’.” 

“You’re wel — What?” 

The young man seemed to get even 
taller. “I greatly appreciate your 
hospitality, Mrs. Forsythe. I have 
you at a disadvantage, ma’m, and one 
I Miall correct.” He put a crooked 
forefinger between his lips and blew 
out an incredible blast of sound. 

“Tiny!” he roared. “Here to me, 
dahg, an’ mek me known !” 

There was a roar from upstairs, 
and Tiny came tumbling dowm, 
scrabbling wildly as he took the turn 
at the foot of the stairs and hurtled 
over the slick flooring to crash joy- 
fully into the young man. 

“Ah, you beast,” crooned the man, 
cuffing the dog happily. His accent 
thickened. “You thrive yourself here 
wid de lady-dem, you gray-yut styou- 
pid harse. You glad me, mon, you 
glad me.” He grinned at the two as- 
tonished women. “Forgive me,” he 
said as he pummeled Tiny, pulled his 
ears, shoved him away and caught 



him by the jaws. “For true, I 
couldn’t get in the first word with 
Mrs. Forsythe, and after I couldn’t 
help meself. Alec my name is, and 
the telegram I took from the true 
messenger, finding him sighing and 
sw'eating at the sight of the hill 
there.” 

Alistair covered her face with her 
hands and said “Oooh.” Mrs. For- 
sythe whooped with laughter. She 
found her voice and demanded, 
“Young man, what is your last 
name ?” 

“Sundersen, ma’m.” 

“Mother ! Why did you ask him 
that?” 

“For reasons of euphony,” said 
Mrs. Forsythe with a twinkle. 
Alexander Sundersen. Very good. 
Alistair — ” 

“Stop! Mum, don’t you dare — ” 

“I was going to say, Alistair, if 
you and our guest will excuse me. 
I’ll have to get back to my knitting.” 
She went to the door. 

Alistair threw an appalled look at 
Alec aiM^cried, “Mother ! What are 
you k^Hng ?” 

“My brows, darling. See you 
later,” Mrs. Forsythe chuckled, and 
went out. 

It took almost a week for Alec to 
get caught up with the latest devel- 
opments in Tiny, for he got the story 
in the most meticulous detail. There 
never seemed to be enough time to 
get an explanation or an anecdote in, 
so swiftly did the time fly when he 
and Alistair were together. Some of 
these days he went into the city with 
Alistair in the morning, and spent 
the day in buying tools and equip- 



TINY AXP THE MONSTEK 



65 



* 

ment for his estate. New York was 
a wonder city to him — • he had been 
there only once before — and Ali.stair 
found herself getting quite pos.ses- 
sive about the place, showing it off 
like the contents of a jewel box. 
And then Alec stayed at the house 
a couple of days. He endeared him- 
self forever to Mrs. Forsythe by re- 
moving, cleaning, and rcfacing the 
clutch on the Blue Kangaroo, simpli- 
fying the controls on the gas re- 
frigerator so it could be defrosted 
without a major operation, and put- 
ting a building-jack under the corner 
of the porch which threatened to sag. 

And the sessions with Tiny were 
resumed and intensified. At first he 
seemed a little uneasy when Alec 
joined one of them, but within half 
an hour he relaxed. Thereafter, more 
and more he would interrupt Alistair 
to turn to Alec. Although he appar- 
ently could not understand Alec’s 
thoughts at all, he seemed to com- 
prehend perfectly when Alec spoke 
to Alistair. And within a few days 
she learned to accept these interrup- 
tions, for they speeded up.tlie re- 
search they were doing. A Tec was 
almost totally ignorant of the ad- 
vanced theory with which Alistair 
worked, but his mind was clear, 
quick, and very direct. He was no 
theorist, and that was good. He was 
one of those rare grease-monkey 
geniuses, with a grasp that amounted 
to intuition concerning the laws of 
cause and effect. Tiny’s reaction to 
this seemed to be approval. At any 
rate, the occasions when Alistair lost 
the track of what Tiny was after, 
happened less and less frequently. 
Alec instinctively knew just how far 

t!0 



to go back, and then how to spot the 
turning at which they had gone 
astray. And liit by bit, they began 
to identify what it was that Tiny was 
after. As to why — and how — he was 
after it, Alec’s experience with old 
Debbil seemed a clue. It certainly 
was sufficient to keep Alec plugging 
away at a possible solution to the 
strange animal’s stranger need. 

“It was down at the sugar mill,’’ 
he told Alistair, after he had become 
fully acquainted with the incredible 
dog’s actions, and they were trying 
to determine the why and the how. 
“He called me over to the chute 
where cane is loaded into the con- 
veyors. 

“ ‘Bahss,’ he told me, ‘dat t’ing 
dere, it not safe, sah.’ And he pointed 
through the guard over the bullgears 
that drove the conveyor. Great big 
everlahstin’ teeth it has. Miss Ali- 
stair, a full ten inches long, and it 
whirlin’ to the drive pinion. It’s old, 
but strong for good. Debbil, what 
he saw was a bit o’ play on the pinion 
shaf’. 

“ ‘Now, you’re an old fool,’ I told 
him. 

“ ‘No, bahss,’ ” he says. ‘Look 
now, sah, de t’ing wit’ de teet’ — dem, 
it not safe, sah. I mek you see,’ 
and before I could move meself or 
let a thought trickle, he ol>ens the 
guard up and thrus’ his han’ inside ! 
Bull gear, it run right up his arm 
and nip it off, neat as ever, at the 
shoulder. I humbly beg your par- 
don, Miss Alistair.’’ 

“G-go on,’’ said Alistair, through 
her handkerchief. 

“W’ell, sir, old Debbil was an idiot 
for true, and he only died the way 



.\STOUNniXG SCIKNCK-PICTION 



he lived, rest him. He was old and 
he was all eaten out with malaria and 
elephantiasis and the like, that not 
even Dr. Thetford could save him. 
But a strange thing happened. As 
he lay dyin’, with the entire village 
gathered roun’ the door whisperin’ 
plans for the wake, he .sent to tell 
me come quickly. Down I run, and 
for the smile on his face I glad him 
when I cross the doorstep.’’ 

As Alec spoke, he was back in the 
Spanish-wall hut, with the air close 
under the palm-thatch roof, and the 
glare of the. pressure lantern set on 
the tiny window ledge to give the old 
man light to die by. Alec’s accent 
deepened; “ ‘How you feel, mon?’ I 
ahsk him. ‘Bahss, I’m a dead man 
now, but I got a light in mah hey- 
yud.’ 

“ ‘Tell me, then, Debbil.’ 

“ ‘Bahss, de folk-dem .say, ol’ Deb- 
Ijil, him cyahn’t remembah de taste 
of a mango as he t’row away de skin. 
JHim cyahn’t remembah his own 
house do he stay away t’ree day.’ 

“ ‘Loose talk, Debbil.’ 

“ ‘True talk, Bahss. Foh de Lahd 
give me a leaky pot fo’ hoi’ ma brains. 
But Bahss, I do recall one t’ing now, 
bright an’ clear, and you must know. 
Bahss, de d.ay I go up the wahtah 
line, I see a great jumbee in de stones 
of de Gov’nor Palace dere.’ ” 

“What’s a Jumbee?” asked Mrs. 
Forsythe. 

“A ghost, ma’m. The Crucians 
-.arry a crawlin’ heap of supersti- 
tions. Tiny ! What eats you, mon ?’’ 

Tiny growled again. Alec and Ali- 
stair exchanged a look. “He doesn't 
want you to go on.” 

TtNy ANP THE MONSTE. 



“Listen carefully. I want him to 
get this. I am his friend. I want 
to help you help him. I realize that 
he wants as few people as possible 
to find out about this thing. I will 
say nothing to anybody unless and 
until I have his permission.” 

“Well, Tiny?” 

The dog stood restlessly, swinging 
his great head from Alistair to Alec. 
Finally he made a sound like an 
audible shrug, then turned to Mrs. 
Forsythe. 

“Mother’s part of me.” said Ali- 
stair firmly. “That’s the way it’s 
got to be. No alternative.’’ She 
leaned forward. “You can’t talk to 
us. You can only indicate what you 
want said and done. I think Alec’s 
story will help us to understand what 
you want, and help you to get it more 
quickly. Understand ?” 

Tiny gazed at her for a long mo- 
ment, said “IV huff!” and lay down 
with his nose between his paws and 
his eyes fixed on Alec. 

“I think that’s the green light,’’ 
said Mrs. Forsythe, “and I might 
add that most of it was due to my 
daughter’s conviction that you’re a 
wonderful fellow.” 

“Mother!” ' 

“Well, pare me down and call me 
Spud ! They’re both blushing !” said 
Mrs. Forsythe blatantl}^ 

“Go on, Alec,” choked Alistair. 
“Tlf&nk you. Old Debbil told me 
a fine tale of the tilings he had seen 
at the ruins. A great beast, mind 
you, with no shape at all, and a face 
ugly to drive you mad. And about 
the beast was what he called a ‘feelin’ 
good’. He said it was a miracle, blit 
he feared nothing. ‘Wet it was, 

AST— 3S GT 



Bahss, like a slug, an’ de eye it have 
is whirlin’ an’ shakin’, an’ I standin’ 
dar feelin’ like a bride at de altar 
step an’ no fear in me.’ Well, I 
thought the old man’s mind was wan- 
dering, for I knew he was touched. 
But the story he told was that clear, 
and never a simple second did he 
stop to think. C^t it all came like 
a true thing. 

“He said that Tiny walked to the 
be^st, and that it curved over him 
like an ocean wave. It closed over 
the dog, and Debbil was rooted there 
the livelong day, still without fear, 
and feelin’ no smallest desire to 
move. He had no surprise at all, 
even at the thing he saw restin’ in 
the thicket among the old stones. 

“He said it was a submarine, a 
mighty one as great as the estate 
house and with no break nor mar in 
its surface but for the glass part let 
in where the mouth is on a shark. 

“And then when the sun begun to 
dip, the beast gave a shudderin’ heave 
and rolled back, and out walked Tiny. 
He stepped up to Debbil and stood. 
Then the beast began to quiver and 
shake, and Debbil said the air aroun’ 
him heavied with the work the mon- 
ster was doing, tryin’ to talk. A Cloud 
formed in his brain, and a voice 
swept over him. ‘Not a livin’ word, 
Bahss, nor d sound at all. But it 
said to forget. It said to leave dis 
place and forget, sah.’ And |Jie last 
thing old Debbil. saw as he turned 
:iway was the beast slumping down, 
seeming all but dead from the work 
it had done to speak at all. ‘An’ de 
cloud leave in mah hey-yud, Bahss, 
f’om dat time onward. I’m a dead 
man now, Bahss, but de cloud gone 

«8 



and Debbil know de story.’ ” Alec 
leaned back and looked at his hands. 
“That was all. This must have hap- 
pened about fifteen months pahst, 
just before Tiny began to show his 
strange stripe.’’ He drew a deep 
breath and looked up. “Maybe I’m 
gullible. But I knew the old man too 
well. He never in this life could in- 
vent such a tale. I troubled myself 
to go up to the Governor’s Palace 
after the buryin’. I might have been 
mistaken, but something big had lain 
in the deepest thicket, for it was 
crushed into a great hollow place 
near a hundred foot long. Well, there 
you are. For what it’s worth, you 
have the story of a superstitious an’ 
illiterate old man, at the point of 
death by violence and many years 
sick to boot.’’ 

There was a long silence, and at 
last Alistair threw her lucent hair 
back and said, “It isn’t Tiny at all. 
It’s a ... a thing outside Tiny.” She 
looked at the dog, her eyes wide. 
“And I don’t even mind.” 

“Neither did Debbil, when he saw 
it,” said Alec gravely. 

Mrs. Forsythe snapped, “What are 
we sitting gawking at each other for? 
Don’t answer; I’ll tell you. All of 
us can think up a story to fit the 
facts, and we’re all too self-con- 
scious to come out with it. Any story 
which fit those facts would really be 
a killer.” 

“Well said,” Alec grinned. “Would 
you like to tell us your idea ?” 

“Silly boy,” muttered Alistair. 

“Don't be impertinent, child. Of 
course I’d like to tell you, Alec. I 
think that the good Lord, in His in- 
finite wisdom, has decided that it was 



ASTOUNDING .SCI ENCK-FICTION 



about time for Alistair to come to 
her senses, and, knowing that it 
would take a quasi-scientific miracle 
to do it, dreamed up this — ” 

“Some day,” said Alistair icily, 
“I’m going to pry you loose from 
your verbosity and your sense of 
humor in one fell swoop.” 

Mrs. Forsythe grinned. “There is 
a time for jocularity, kidiet, and this 
is it. I hate solemn people solemnly 
sitting around being awed by things. 
What do you make of all this, Alec ?” 

Alec pulled his ear and said, “I 
vote we leave it up to Tiny. It’s his 
show. Let’s get on with the work, 
and just keep in mind what we al- 
ready know.” 

And to their astonishment. Tiny 
stumped over to Alec and licked his 
hand. 

The blowoff came six weeks after 
Alec’s arrival. (Oh, yes ! he stayed 
six weeks, and longer! it took some 
fiendish cogitation for him to think 
of enough legitimate estate business 
which had to be done in New York 
to keep him that long ; but after that 
he was so much one qf the family 
that he needed no excuse.) He had 
devised a code system for Tiny, so 
that Tiny could add something to 
their conversations. His point : “Here 
he sits, ma’am, like a fly on the wall, 
seeing everything and hearing every- 
thing and saying not a word. Pic- 
ture it for yourself, and }'ou in such 
a position, full entranced as you are 
with the talk you liear.’’ And for 
Mrs. Forsythe particularly, the men- 
tal picture was altogether too vivid ! 
It was so well presented that Tiny’s 
research went by the board for four 

TINT AND THR MONSTER 



days while they devised the code. 
They had to give up the idea of a 
glove with a pencil-pocket in it, with 
which Tiny might write a little, or 
any similar device. The dog was sim- 
ply not deft enough for such meticu- 
lous work; and besides, he showed 
absolutely no signs of understanding 
any written or printed symbolism. 
Unless, of course, Alistair thought 
about it . . . 

Alec’s plan was simple. He cut 
some wooden forms — a disk, a 
square, a triangle to begin with. The 
disk signified “yes”, or any other af- 
firmation, depending on the context. 
The square was “no” or any nega- 
tion; and the triangle indicated a 
question or a change in subject. The 
amount of informationTiny was able 
to impart by moving from one to an- 
other of these forms was astonish- 
ing. Once a subject for discussion 
was established. Tiny would take up 
a stand between the disk and the 
square, so that all he had to do was 
to swing his head to one side or the 
other, to indicate a “yes” or a “no”. 
No longer were there those exasper- 
ating sessions in which the track of 
his research was lost while they back- 
trailed to discover where they had 
gone astray. The conversations ran 
like this : 

“Tiny, 1 have a question. Hope 
you won’t think it too personal. May 
I ask it?” That was Alec, always 
infinitely polite to dogs. He had al- 
ways recognijzed their innate dignity^ 

Yes, the answer would come, as 
Tiny swung his head "over the disk. 

“Were we right in assuming that 
you, the dog, are not communicating 
with us: that you are the medium?’' 



Tiny went to the triangle. “You 
want to change the subject?” 

Tiny hesitated, then went to the 
square. No. 

Alistair Said, “He obviously wants 
something from us before he will 
discuss the question. Right, Tiny?” 
Yes. 

Mrs. Forsythe said, “He’s had his 
dinner, and he doesn’t smoke. I think 
he wants us to assure him that we’ll 
keep his secret.” 

Yes. 

“Good. Alec, you’re wonderful,” 
said Alistair. “Mother, stop beam- 
ing ! I only meant — ” 

“Leave it at that, child ! Any qual- 
ification will spoil it for the man !” 
“Thank you, ma’m,” said Alec 
gravely, with that deep twinkle of 
amusement around his eyes. Then he 
turned back to Tiny. “Well, what 
about it, sah ? Are you a superdog ?” 
No. 

“Who . . . no, he can’t answer 
that. Let’s go back a bit. Was old 
Debbil’s story true?” 

Yes. 

“Ah.” They exchanged glances. 
“Where is this — monster? Still in 
St. Croix?” 

No. 

“Here?” 

Yes. 

“You mean here, in this room, or 
in the house ?” 

No. 

“Nearby, though?” 

Yes. 

“How can we find out just where, 
without mentioning the countryside 
item by item ?” asked Alistair. 

“I know,” said Mrs. Forsythe. 
“Alec, according to Debbil, that ‘sub- 



marine’ thing was pretty big, wasn’t 
it?” 

“That it was, ma’m.” 

“Good. Tiny, does he , . . it . . . 
have the ship here, too ?” 

Yes. 

Mrs. Forsythe spread her hands. 
“That’s it, then. There’s only one 
place around here where you could 
hide such an object.” She nodded 
her head at the west wall of the 
house. 

“The river !” cried Alistair. “That 
right. Tiny?” 

Yes. And Tiny w’ent immediately 
to the triangle. 

“Wait!” said Alec. “Tiny, beggin’ 
your pardon, but there’s one more 
question. Shortly after you took 
passage to New York, there was a 
business with compasses, where they 
all pointed to the west. Was that the 
ship ?” 

Yes. 

“In the water?” 

No. 

“Why,” said Alistair, “this is pure 
science fiction! Alec, do you ever 
get science fiction in the tropics ?” 

“Ah, Miss Alistair, not often 
enough, for true. But well I know 
it. The spaceships are old Mother 
Goose to me. But there’s a differ- 
ence here. For in all the stories I’ve 
read, when a beast comes here from 
space, it’s to kill and conquer; and 
yet — and I don’t know why — I know 
that this one wants nothing of the 
sort. More, he’s out to do us good.” 

“I feel the same way,” said Mrs. 
Forsythe thoughtfully. “It’s sort of 
a protective cloud which seems to 
surround us. Does that make sense 
to you, Alistair ?” 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



“I kncnv it from ’way back,” said 
Alistair with conviction. She looked 
at the dog thoughtfully. “I wonder 
why he . . . it . . . won’t show itself. 
And why it can communicate only 
through me. And why me?” 

“I’d say, Miss Alistair, that you 
were chosen because of your metal- 
lurgy. As to w'hy we never see the 
beast — Well, it knows best. Its rea- 
son must be a good one.” 

Day after day, and bit by bit, they 
got and gave information. Many 
things remained mysteries; but 
strangely, there seemed no real need 
to question Tiny too closely. The at- 
mosphere of confidence, of good will 
that surrounded them madcquestions 
seem not only unnecessary but down- 
right rude. 

And da)' by day, and little by little, 
a drawing began to take shape under 
Alec’s skilled hands. It was a cast- 



ing, with a simple enough external 
contour, but inside it contained a 
series of baffles and a chamber. It 
was designed, apparently, to support 
and house a carballoy shaft. There 
were no openings into the central 
chamber except those taken by the 
shaft. The shaft turned : something 
within the chamber apparently drove 
it. There was plenty of discussion 
about it. 

“Why the baffles?” moaned Ali- 
stair, palming all the neatness out of 
her flaming hair. “Why carballoy? 
And in the name of Nemo, why 
tungsten ?” 

Alec stared at the drawing for a 
long moment, then suddenly clapped 
a hand to his head. “Tiny ! Is there 
radiation inside that housing? I 
mean, hard stuff?” 

Yes. 

“There you are, then,” said Alec. 
“Tungsten to shield the radiation. A 




TINX AND THE MONSTER 



7t 



casting for uniformity. The baffles 
to make a meander out of the shaft 
openings — see, the shjtft has plates 
turned on it to fit between the 
baffles.” 

“And nowhere for anything to go 
in, nowhere for anything to come 
out — except the shaft, of course — 
and besides, you can’t cast tungsten 
that way! Maybe Tiny’s monster 
can, but we can’t. Maybe with the 
right flux, and with enough power — 
but that’s silly. Tungsten won’t cast.” 
“And we cahn’t build a spaceship. 
There must be a way I” 

“Not with today’s facilities, and 
not with tungsten,” said Alistair. 
“Tiny’s ordering it from us the way 
we would order a wedding cake at 
the corner bakery.” 

“What made you say ‘wedding 
cake’?” ' 

“You, too? Alec? Don’t I get 
enough of that from Mother?” But 
she smiled all the same. “But about 
the casting — it seems to me that our 
mysterious friend is in the position 
of a radio fiend who understands 
every part of his set, how it’s made, 
how and why it works. Then a tube 
blows, and he finds he can’t buy one. 
He has to make one if he gets one at 
all. Apparently old Debbil’s beast is 
in that kind of a spot. What about 
it. Tiny? Is your friend short a part 
which he understands but has never 
built before ?” 

Ves. 

“And he needs it to get away from 
Earth?” 

Ves. 

Alec asked, "What’s the trouble? 
Can’t get escape velocity ?” 

Tiny hesitated, and then went to 



the triangle. "Either he doesn’t want 
to talk about it, or the question 
doesn’t quite fit the situation,” said 
Alistair. “It doesn’t matter. Our 
main problem is the casting. It just 
can’t be done. Not by anyone on this 
planet, as far as I know ; and I think 
I know. It has to be tungsten, Tiny ?” 

Ves. 

“Tungsten, for what ?” asked Alec. 
“Radiation shield ?” 

Ves. 

He turned to Alistair. “Isn’t there 
something just as good?” 

She mused, staring at his drawing. 
“Yes, several things,” she said 
thoughtfully. Tiny watched her, 
moveless. He seemed to slump as 
she shrugged dispiritedly and said, 
“But not anything with walls as thin 
as that. A yard or so of lead might 
do it, and have something like the 
mechanical strength he seems to 
want, but it would obviously be too 
big. Beryllium — ” At the word. 
Tiny went and stood right on top of 
the square — a most emphatic no. 

“How about an alloy ?” .Alec asked. 

“Well, Tiny?” 

Tiny went to the triangle. Alistair 
nodded. “You don’t know. I can’t 
think of one. I’ll take it up with Dr. 
Nowland. Maybe — ” 

The following day Alec stayed 
home and spent the day arguing 
cheerfully with Mrs. Forsythe and 
building a grape arbor. It was a ra- 
diant Alistair who came home that 
evening. “Got it! Got it 1” she caroled 
as she danced in. “.Alec! Tiny — 
come on 1” 

They flew upstairs to the study. 
Without removing the green 



ASTOtlNIUNG SeiKNCK-FICTION 



“iK-anie" with the orange feather that 
so nearly matched her hair, Alistair 
hauled out four reference books and 
began talking animatedly. “Auric 
molybdenum, Tiny! What about 
that ? Gold and molyb III should do 
it ! Listen 1” And she launched forth 
into a spatter of absorption data, 
Greek-letter formulae, and strength 
of materials comparisons which quite 
made Alec’s head swim. He sat 
watching her without listening. In- 
creasingly, this was his greatest 
pleasure. 

When Alistair was quite through. 
Tiny walked away from her and lay 
down, gazing off into space. 

“W'ell, strike me!’’ said Alec. 
“Look yonder. Miss Alistair. The 
very first time I ever saw him think- 
ing something over.” 

“Sh-h! Don’t disturb him, then. 
If that is the answer, and if he never 
thought of it before, it will take some 
figuring out. There’s no knowing 
what fantastic kind of science he’s 
comparing it with.” 

* “I see the point. Like . . . well, 
suppose we crashed a plane in the 
Brazilian jungle, and needed a new 
hydraulic cylinder on the landing 
gear. Now, then, one of the natives 
shows us ironwood, and it’s up to 
us to figure out if we can make it 
serve.” 

“That’s about it,” 1)reathed Ali- 
■stair. “I — ” She was interrupted 
by Tiny, who suddenly leaped up and 
ran to her, kissing her hands, com- 
mitting the forbidding enormity of 
putting his paws on her shoulders, 
running back to the wooden forms 
and nudging the disk, the yes sym- 
bol. His tail was going like a metro- 



nome without its pendulum. Mrs. 
Forsythe came in in the midst of all 
this rowdiness and demanded : 
“What goes on ? Who made a der- 
vish out of Tiny? What have you 
been feeding him? Don’t tell me. 
Let me . . . you don’t mean you’ve 
solved his problem for him? What 
are you going to do — buy him a pogo 
stick?” 

“Oh, Mum ! We’ve got it ! An al- 
loy of molybdenum and gold ! I can 
get it alloyed and cast in no time !” 
“Good, honey — good. You going 
to cast the whole thing ?” She pointed 
to the drawing. 

“Why, yes.” 

“Humph !” 

“Mother ! Why, if I may ask, do 
you ‘humph’ in that tone of voice?” 
“You may ask. Chicken, who’s go- 
ing to pay for it?” 

“Why, that will . . . I— oh. Oh!" 
she said, aghast, and ran to the draw- 
ing.. Alec came and looked over her 
shoulder. She figured in the corner 
of the drawing, oh-ed once again, 
and sat down weakly. 

“How mucii?” asked Alec. 

“I’ll get an estimate in tire morn- 
ing,” she said faintly. “I know plenty 
of people. I can get it at cost — 
maybe.” She looked at Tiny de- 
spairingly. He came and laid his 
head against her knee, and she pulled 
at his ears. “I won’t let you down, 
darling,” she whispered. 

She got the estimate the next day. 
It was a little over thirteen thousaiid 
dollars. 

Alistair and Alec stared blankly at 
each other and then at the dog. 
“Maybe you can tell us where we 



TINY .AND THE M0N8TEK 



78 



can raise that much money?” said 
Alistair, as if she expected Tiny to 
whip out a wallet. 

Tiny whimpered, licked Alistair’s 
hand, looked at Alec, and then lay 
down. 

“Now what ?” mused Alec. 

“Now we go and fix something to 
eat,” said Mrs. Forsythe, moving to- 
ward the door. The others were about 
to follow, when Tiny leaped to his 
feet and ran in front of them. He 
stood in the doorway and whimpered. 
When they came closer, he barked. 

“Shh! What is it. Tiny? Want 
us to stay here a while?” 

“Say! Who’s the boss around 
here?” Mrs. Forsythe wanted to 
know. 

“He is,” said Alec, and he knew 
he was speaking for all of them. 
They sat down, Mrs. Forsythe on 
the studio couch, Alistair at her desk, 
Alec at the drawing table. But Tiny 
seemed not to approve of the ar- 
rangement. He became vastly ex- 
cited, running to Alec, nudging him 
hard, dashing to Alistair, taking her 
wrist very gently in his jaws and 
pulling gently toward Alec. 

“What is it, fellow?” 

“Seems like matchmaking to me,” 
remarked Mrs. Forsythe. 

■ “Nonsense, Mum!” said Alistair, 
coloring. “He wants Alec and me 
(0 change places, that’s all.” 

Alec said, “Oh !” and went to sit 
beside Airs. Forsythe. Alistair sat at 
the drawing table. Tiny put a paw 
up on it, poked at the large tablet of 
paper. Alistair looked at him curi- 
ously, then tore off the top sheet. 
Tiny nudged a pencil with his nose. 

Then they waited. Somehow, no 

74 



one wanted to speak. Perhaps no one 
could, but there seemed to be no rea- 
son to try. And gradually a tension 
built up in the room. Tiny stood 
stiff and rapt in the center of the 
room. His eyes glazed, and when he 
finally keeled over limply, no one 
went to him. 

Alistair picked up the pencil slow- 
ly. Watching her hand, Alec was 
reminded of the movement of the 
pointer on a ouija board. ' The pen- 
cil traveled steadily, in small surges, 
to the very top of the paper and hung 
there. .Alistair’s face was quite blank. 

After that no one could say what 
happened, exactly. It was as if their 
eyes had done what their voices had 
done. They could see, but they did 
not care to. And Alistair’s pencil 
began to move. Something, some- 
where, was directing her mind — not 
her hand. Faster and faster her 
pencil flew, and it wrote what was 
later to be known as the Forsythe 
Formulae. 

There was no sign then, of course, 
of the furor that they would cause, 
of the millions of words of conjec- 
ture which were written when it was 
discovered that the girl who wrote 
them could not possibly have had the 
mathematical background to have 
written them. They were understood 
by no one at first, and by very few 
people ever. Alistair certainly did 
not know what they meant. 

An editorial in a popular magazine 
came startlingly dose to the true na- 
ture of the Formulae when it said, 
“The Forsythe Formulae, which de- 
scribe what tlie Sunday supplements 
call the ‘Something-for-Nothing 
Clutch’, and the drawing which ac- 

ASTOUNDIXG SCIRNOE-FICTION 



companies them, signify little to the 
layman. As far as can be deter- 
mined, the Formulae are the descrip- 
tion and working principles of a de- 
vice. It appears to be a power plant 
of sorts, and if it is ever understood, 
atomic power will go the way of gas- 
lights. 

“A sphere of energy is enclosed in 
a shell made of neutron-absorbing 
material. This sphere has inner and 
outer ‘layers’. A shaft passes through 
the sphere. Apparently a magnetic 
field must be rotated about the outer 
casing of the device. The sphere of 
energy aligns itself with this field. 
The inner sphere rotates with the 
outer one, and has the ability to turn 
the shaft. Unless the mathematics 
used are disproved — and no one 
seems to have come anywhere near 
doing that, unorthodox as they are — 
the aligning effect between the ro- 
tating field and the two concentric 
spheres, as well as the shaft, is quite 
independent of any load. In other 
words, if the original magnetic field 
rotates at three thousand rpm, the 
shaft will rotate at three thousand 
rpm, even if there is only a sixteenth 
horsepower turning the field while 
there is a ten thousand braking stress 
on the shaft. 

“Ridiculous? Perhaps. And per- 
haps it is no more so than the ap- 
parent impossibility of fifteen watts 
of energy pouring into the antenna 
of a radio station, and nothing 
coming down. The key to the whole 
problem is in the nature of those 
self-contained spheres of force in- 
side the shell. Their power is appar- 
ently inherent, and consists of an 
ability to align, just as the useful 

TINS iND THE MONSTEi. 



property of steam is an ability to 
expand. If, as is suggested by Rein- 
hardt in his ‘Usage of the Symbol (3 
in the Forsythe Formulae’ these 
spheres are nothing but stable con- 
centrations of pure binding energy, 
we have here a source of power be- 
yond the wildest dreams of maskind. 
And whether or not we succeed in 
building such devices, it cannot be 
denied that whatever their mysteri- 
ous source, the Forsythe Formulae 
are an epochal gift to several sci- 
ences, including, if you like, the art 
of philosophy.’’ 

After it was over, and the Formu- 
lae written, the terrible tension lifted. 
The three humans sat in their happy 
coma, and the dog'lay senseless on 
the rug. Mrs. Forsythe was the 
first to move, standing up abruptly. 
“Well!” she said. 

It seemed to break a spell. Every- 
thing was quite normal. ■ No hang- 
overs, no sense of strangeness, no 
fear. They stood looking wonder- 
ingly at the mass of minute figures. 

“I don’t know,” murmured Ali- 
stair, and the phrase covered a world 
of meaning. Then, “Alec— that cast- 
ing. We’ve got to get it done. We’ve 
just got to, no matter what it costs 
us!”' 

“I’d like to,” said Alec. “Why do 
we have to ?” 

She waved toward the drawing 
table. “We’ve been given that.” 

“You don’t say!” said Mrs. For- 
sythe. “And what is thatf” 

Alistair put her hand to her head, 
and a strange, unfocused look came 
into her eyes. That look was the 
only part of the whole affair that 

75 



ever really bothered Alec. It was a 
place she had gone to, a little bit; 
and he knew that no matter what- 
ever happened, he would never be 
able to go there with her. 

.She said, “He’s been . . . talking 
to me, you know. You do know that, 
don’t you? I’m not guessing, Alec 
—Mum.’’ • 

“I believe you, chicken,’’ her 
mother said softly. “What are you 
trying to say ?’’ 

“I got it in concepts. It isn’t a 
thing you can repeat, really. But 
the idea is that he couldn’t give us 
any thing'. His ship is completely 
functional, and there isn’t anything 
he can exchange for what he wants 
us to do. But he has given us some- 
thing of great value — ’’ Her voice 
trailed off; she seemed to listen to 
something for a moment. “Of value 
in several ways. A new science, a 
new approach to attack the science. 
New tools, new mathematics.’’ 

“But what is it? What can it do? 
-\nd how is it going to help us pay 
for the casting?’’ asked Mrs. For- 
sythe. 

“It can’t, immediately,’’ said Ali- 
stair decisively. “It’s too big. We 
don’t even know what it is. Why are 
you arguing ? Can’t you understand 
that he can’t give us any gadgetry? 
That we haven’t his techniques, ma- 
terials, and tools, and so we couldn’t 
make any actual machine he sug- 
gested ? He’s done the only thing he 
cSn; he’s given us a new science, 
and tools to take it apart.’’ 

“That I know,’’ said Alec gravely. 
“Well indeed. I felt that. And I . . . 
I trust him. Do you, ma’m ?” 

“Yes, of course. I think he’s — 



people. I think he has a sense of 
humor and a sense of justice,” said 
Mrs. Forsythe firmly. “-Let’s get our 
heads together. We ought to be able 
to scrape it up some way. And why 
shouldn’t we ? Haven't we three got 
something to talk about for the rest 
of our lives?” 

And their heads went together. 

. Tliis is the letter that arrived two 
months later in St. Croix. 

Honey-lamb, 

Hold on to your seat. It’s all over./ 

The casting arrived. I missed you 
more than ever, but when you have to go 
— and you know I’m glad you went 1 
Anyway, I did as you indicated, through 
Tiny, before you left. The men who 
rented me the boat and ran it for me 
thought I was crazy, and said so. Do 
you know that once we .were out on the 
river with the casting, and Tiny started 
whuffing and whimpering to tell me we 
were on the right spot, and I told the 
men to tip the castir^ over the side, 
they had the collosal nerve to insist on 
opening the crate? Got quite nasty about 
it. Didn’t want to be a party to any 
dirty work. It was against my principles, 
but I let them, just to expedite matters. 
They were certain there was a body in 
the box 1 When they saw what it was, 
I was going to bend my umbrelly over 
their silly heads, but they looked so 
funny! I couldn’t do a thing but roar 
with laughter. That was when the man 
said I was crazy. 

Anyhow, over the side it went, into the 
river. Made a lovely splash. And about 
a minute later, I got the loveliest feeling 
— I wish I could describe it to you. I 
was sort of overwhelmed by a feeling of 
utter satisfaction, and gratitude, and . . . 
oh, I don’t know. I just felt good, all 
over. I looked at Tiny, and he was 
trembling. I think he felt it, too. I’d 
call it a titank you, on a grand psychic 
scale. I think you can rest a.ssured that 
Tiny’s monster got what it wanted. 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCK-FICTION 



j?ut that wasn’t the end of it. 1 paid 
oflf the boatmen, and started up tlie bank. 
Something made me stop, and wait, and 
then go back to the water’s edge. 

It was early evening, and very still, 
r was under some sort of a compulsion 
— not an unpleasant thing, but an un- 
breakable one. I sat down on the river 
wall and watched the water. There was 
no one around — the boat had left — except 
one of those snazzy Sunloungc cruisers 
anchored a few yards out. I remember 
how still it was, because there was a 
little girl playing on the deck of the 
yacht, and I could hear her footsteps as 
she ran about. 

Suddenly I noticed something in the 
water. I suppose I should have been 
frightened, but somehow I wasn’t at all. 
Whatever the thing was, it was big and 
gray and slimy and quite shapeless. And 
somehow, it seemed to be the source of 
this aura of well-being and protective- 
ness that I felt. It was staring at me. 
I knew it was before I saw that it had 
an eye — a big one, with something whirl- 
ing inside of it ... I don’t know. I 



wish I could w'rite. 1 wish I had the 
power to tell you what it was like. 
I know that it was, by human standards, 
infinitely revolting. If this was Tiny’s 
monster, I could understand its being 
sensitive to the revulsion it might cause. 
And wrongly, for I felt to the core that 
the creature was good. 

It winked at me. I don’t mean blink. 
It winked. And then everything hap- 
pened at once. 

The creature was gone, and in seconds 
there was a disturbance in the water by 
the yacht. Something gray and wet 
reached up out of the river and I saw it 
was going for that little girl. Only a 
tyke — about three, she* was. Red hair 
just like yours. And it thumped that 
child in the small of the back just enough 
to knock her over — into the river. 

And can you believe it? I just sat 
there watching, and said never a word! 
It didn’t seem right to me that that baby 
could be struggling in the water. But it 
didn’t seem zvrong either! 

Well, before I could get my wits to- 
gether, Tiny was off the wall like a hairj’ 




Produced By The Maker Of The Famous Gillette Blue Blade 



TINY AND THE MONSTER 



T7 



bullet and streaking through the water. 
I have often wondered why his feet are 
so big; I never will again. The hound is 
build like the lower half of a paddle 
wheel ! In two shakes he had the baby 
by the scruff of the neck and was bring- 
ing her back to me. No one had seen 
that child get pushed, Alistair! No one 
but me. But there was a man on the 
yacht who must have seen her fall. He 
was all over the deck roaring orders and 
getting in the way of things, and by the 
time he had his wherry in the water. 
Tiny had reached me with the little girl. 
She wasn’t frightened either — she thought 
it was a grand joke! Wonderful 
youngster. 

So the man came ashore, all gratitude 
and tears, and wanted to gold-plate Tiny 
or something. Then he saw me. “That 
your dog?” I said it was my daughter’s. 
She was in St. Croix on her honeymoon. 
Before I could stop him he had a check- 
book out and was scratching away at it. 
He said he knew my kind. Said he 
knew I’d never accept a thing for my- 
self. but wouldn’t refuse something for 
my (laughter. I enclose the check. Why 
he picked a sum like thirteen thousand. 
I’ll never know. Anyhow, I know it’ll 
be a help to you. Since the money really 
comes from Tiny’s monster. I suppose I 
can confess that getting Alec to put up 
the money, even though he would have to 
clean out his savings and mortgage his 
estate, would be a good idea if he were 
one of the family, because then he’d have 
you to help him make it all back again — 
that was all my idea. Sometimes, though, 
watching you, I wonder if I really had 
to work so all-fired hard to get you nice 
people married to each other. 

Well, I imagine that closes the busi- 
ness of Tiny’s monster. There are a lot 
of things we’ll probably never know. I 



can guess some things, though. It could 
communicate with a dog, but not with a 
human, unless it half-killed itself trying. 
Apparently a dog is telepathic with hu- 
mans to a degree, though it probably 
doesn’t understand a lot of what it gets. 
I don’t speak French, but I could prob- 
ably transcribe French phonetically well 
enough so a Frenchman could read it. 
Tiny was transcribing that way. The 
monster could “send” through him, and 
control him completely. It no doubt in- 
doctrinated the dog — if I can use the term 
— the day old Debbil took him up the 
waterline. And when the monster caught, 
through Tiny, the mental picture of you 
when Dr. Schwellenbach mentioned you, 
it went to work through the dog to get 
you working on its problem. Mental pic- 
tures — that’s probably what the monster 
used. That’s how Tiny could tell one 
book from another, without being able ot 
read. You visualize everything you think 
about. What do you think? I think that 
mine’s as g(X)d a guess as any. 

You might be amused to learn that 
last night all the compasses in this neigh- 
borhood pointed west for a couple of 
hours ! Bye now, chillun. Keep on be- 
ing happy. 

Love and love, and a kiss for Alec, 
Mum. 

P. S. Is St. Croix really a nice place 
to honeymoon ? Jack — he’s the fellow who 
signed the check — is getting very senti- 
mental. He’s very like your father. A 
widower, and— Oh, I don’t know. Says 
fate, or something, brought us together. 
Said he hadn’t planned to take a trip 
upriver with the baby, but something 
drove him to it. He can’t imagine why 
he anchored just there. Seemeil a good 
idea at the time. Maybe it was fate. He 
is very sweet. I wish I could forget 
that wink I saw in the water. 



THE END. 






78 



A.STODNDING SCIBNCB-FICTl6> 




JESTING PILOT 

BY LEWIS PADGETT 



Illustrated by Orban 



Under normal circumstances, a man must face 
reality to be a sane, well-balanced citizen. But 
not in that city! Any man who faced and 
understood the reality of the place was insane! 



The city screamed. It had been 
screaming for si.v hundred years. 
And as long as that unendurable 
scream continued — the city teas an 
efficient unit. 

“You’re getting special treatment,” 
Nehral said, looking across the big, 
bare, silent room to where young 
Fleming sat on the cushioned seat. 
“Normally you wouldn't have grad- 
uated to Control for another six 
months, but something’s come up. 
The others think a fresh viewpoint 
might help. And j'ou’re elected, 
since you’re the oldest acolyte.” 

JJ5SXING PILOT 

. ^ - 



“Britton’s older than I am,” Flem- 
ing said. He was a short, heavy, red- 
haired boy with an unusual sensitiv- 
ity conditioned into his blunt fea- 
tures. Utterly relaxed, he sat waiting. 

“Physiological age doesn’t mean 
anything. The civilization-index is 
more important. And the empathy 
level. You’re seventeen, but you’re 
emotionally mature. On the other 
hand, you’re not — set. You haven’t 
been a Controller for years. We 
think you may have some fresh an- 
gles that can help us.” 

“Aren’t fresh angles undesirable ?” 
Nehral’s thin, tired face twisted 

71 ) 



into a faint smile. “There’s been de- 
bate about that. A culture is a liv- 
ing oaganisin and it can’t exist in its 
own waste products. Not indefinite- 
ly. But w'e don’t intend to remain 
isolated indefinitely.’’ 

“I didn’t know that,” Fleming 
said. 

Nehral studied his fingertips. 
"Don’t get the idea that we’re the 
masters. We’re servants, far more 
so than the citizens. We’ve got to 
follow the plan. And we don’t know 
all the details of the plan. That was 
arranged purposely. Some day the 
Barrier will lift. Then the city won’t 
be isolated any longer.” 

“But — outside !” Fleming said, a 
little nervously. “Suppose — ” 

Nehral said, “Six hundred years 
ago the city was built and the Bar- 
rier created. The Barrier’s quite im- 
passable. There’s a switch — I’ll show 
it to you sometime — that’s useless at 
present. Its purpose is to bring the 
Barrier into existence. But no one 
know'S how to destroy the Barrier. 
One theory is that it can’t be de- 
stroyed until its half-life is run, and 
the energy’s reached a sufficiently 
low level. Then it blinks out auto- 
matically.” 

“When?” 

Nehral shrugged. “Nobody knows 
that either. Tomorrow, or a thou- 
sand years from now. Here’s the 
idea. The city was isolated for pro- 
tection. That meant — complete iso- 
lation, Nothing — nothing at all — 
can pass the Barrier. So we’re safe. 
When the Barrier goes, we can see 
what’s happened to the rest of the 
world. If the danger’s gone, we can 
colonize. If it hasn’t, we pull the 

80 



switch again, and we’re safe behind 
the Barrier for another indefinite 
period.” 

Danger. The earth had been too 
big, and too full of people. Archaic 
mores had prevailed. The new sci- 
ence had plunged on, but civilization 
had lagged fatally. 'In those days 
many plans had been proposed. Only 
one had proved practicable. Rigid 
control — thorough utilization of the 
new power — and unbreakable armor. 
So the city zvas built and isolated by 
the Barrier, at a time when all other 
cities were falling . . . 

Nehral said, “We know the dan- 
ger of status quo. New theories, new 
experiments aren’t forbidden. Far 
from it. Some of them can’t be stud- 
ied now, a great many of them. But 
records are kept. That reference li- 
brary will be available when the Bar- 
rier’s lifted. Meanwhile, the city’s 
a lifeboat. This part of the human 
race has to survive. That’s the main 
concern. You don’t study physics in 
a lifeboat. You try to survive. After 
you’ve reached land, you can go to 
work again. But now — ” 

The other cities fell, and the ter- 
ror roared across the earth, six hun- 
dred years ago. It zvas an age of 
genius and of znciousness. The weap- 
ons of the gods zvere at last avail- 
able. The foundations of matter 
ripped screaming apart as the zveap- 
ons zvere used. The lifeboat rode a 
typhoon. The Ark breasted a deluge. 

In other zvords, one thing led to 
another — until the planet shook. 

“First the builders thought the 
Barrier alone would be enough. The 
city, of course, had to be a self-con- 
tained unit. That was difficult. A 

ASTOONDING SCIENCE-l’ICTION 



luuuati bdiifj isn'i. He has to get 
food, fuel — from the air, from plants 
and animals. The solution lay in 
creating all the necessities within the 
city. But then matters got worse. 
There was germ warfare and germ 
mutations. There were the chain re- 
actions. The atmosphere itself, under 
the constant bombardment — " 

More and more complicated grew 
the Ark. 

“So they built the city as it had to 
be built, and then they found that it 
would be — uninhabitable.” 

Fleming tilted back his head. 
Nehral said, “Oh, we’re shielded. 
We’re specialized. B'or we’re the 
Controllers.” 

“Yes, I know. But I've wondered. 
Why can’t the citizens — ” 

“Be shielded as we are? Because 
they’re to be the survivors. We’re 
important only till the Barrier lifts. 
After that, we’ll be useless, away 
from the lifeboat. In a normal 
world, we have no place. But now 
and here, as Controllers of the city, 
we are important. We serve." 
Fleming stirred uneasily. 

Nehral said, “It will be difficult 
for you to conceive this. You have 
been siiecially conditioned since be- 
fore your birth. You never knew — 
none of us ever knew — normal ex- 
istence. You are deaf, dumb, and' 
blind.” 

The boy caught a little of the 
meaning. “That means — ?” 
“Certain senses the citizens have, 
because they’ll be needed when the 
Harrier lifts. We can’t afford to 
have them, under the circumstances 
The telepathic sense is substituted, 
[’ll tell you more about that later. 



Right now I want ) ou to concentiate 
on the problem of Bill Norman. He’s 
a citizen.” 

Nehral paused. He could feel the 
immense weight of the city above 
him, and it seemed to him that the 
foundations were beginning to 
crumble . . . 

“He’s getting out of control,” 
Nehral said flatly. 

“But I’m not important,” Bill 
Norman said. 

They were dancing. Flickering, 
quiet lights beat out from the Sev- 
enth Monument, towering even above 
the roof garden where they were. 
Far overhead was the gray emptiness 
of the Barrier. The music was ex- 
citing. Mia’s hand crept up and ruf- 
fled the back of his neck. 

“You are to me,” she said. “Still, 
I’m prejudiced.” 

She was a tall, slim, dark girl, 
sharp contrast to Norman’s blond 
hugeness. His faintly puzzled blue 
eyes studied her. 

“I’m lucky. I’m not so sure you 
are, Mia.” 

The orchestra reached a rhythmic 
climax; brass hit a low, nostalgic 
note, throbbingly sustained. Norman 
moved his big shoulders uneasily 
and turned toward the parapet, tow- 
ing Mia beside him. They walked 
in silence through the crowd, to a 
walled embrasure where they were 
alone, in a tiny vantage-point over- 
looking the city. 

Mia stole occasional glances at the 
man’s troubled face. He was looking 
at the Seventh Monument, crowned 
with light, and beyond it to the 
Sixth, and. smaller in the distance. 



.rrs'i rNo piLar 



81 



the Fifth — each a ineiiiorial to one 
of the Great Eras of man’s history. 

lint the city — 

There had never been a city like it 
in all the world. For no city before 
had ever been built for man. Mem- 
phis was a towered colossus for the 
memory of kings; Baghdad was a 
sultan’s jewel ; they were stately 
pleasure-domes by decree. New York 
and London, Paris and Moscow — 
they were less functional, less effi- 
cient for their citizens than the caves 
of the troglodytes. In cities man had 
always tried to sow on arid ground. 

But this was a city for men. 

It was not merely a matter of 
ixirks and roads, of rolling ramps 
and jiaragravity currents for levita- 
tion, not simply a question of design 
and architecture. The city was 
planned according to rules of human 
psychology. The people fitted into it 
as into a foam mattress. It was quiet. 
It was beautiful and functional. It 
was ijerfect for its purpose. 

"I saw that psychologist again to- 
day.” Norman said. 

Mia folded her arms and leaned 
on the parapet. She didn’t look at 
her companion. 

“And?” 

“Generalizations.” 

“But they always know the an- 
swers,” Mia said. “They always 
know the right answers.” 

“This one didn’t.” 

“It may take time. Really, Bill, 
you know ... no one’s . . . frus- 
trated — ” 

“I don’t know what it is,” Norman 
said. ‘-Heredity, perhaps. All I know 
is I get these . . . these flashes. Which 
the psychologists can’t e.xplain.” 



"But there has to be an ex- 
planation.” 

“That’s what the psychologist said. 
Still, he couldn’t tell me what it was.” 
“Can’t you analyze it at all ?” she 
a.sked, sliding l»er hand into his. His 
fingers tightened. He looked at the 
Seventh Monument an5 beyond it. 

“No,” he said. “It’s just that I 
feel there isn’t any answer.” 

“To what ?” 

“I don’t know. 1 ... I wish 1 
could get out o f the city.” 

Her hand relaxed suddenly. “Bill. 
You know — ” 

He laughed softly. “I know. 
There’s no way out. Not through 
the Barrier. Maybe that isn’t what 
I want, after all. But this . . . this — ” 
He stared at the Monument. “It 
seems all wrong sometimes. 1 just 
can’t explain it. It’s the whole city. 
It makes me feel haywire. Then 1 
get these flashes — ” 

She felt his hand stiffen. It was 
jerked away abruptly. Bill Norman 
covered his eyes and screamed. 

“Flashes of realization,” Nehral 
said to Fleming. “They don’t last 
long. If they did, he’d go insane or 
die. Of course the citizen psycholo- 
gists can’t help him ; it’s outside their 
scope by definition.” 

Fleming, sensitive to telepathic 
emotion, said, “You’re worried.” He 
did not speak aloud. 

“Naturally. We Controllers have 
our own conditioning. An ordinary 
citizen couldn’t hold our power; it 
wouldn’t be safe. The builders 
worked out a good many plans be- 
fore they decided to create us. 
They’d thought of making androids 



S2 



astounding soienck-uict ion 



and robots to control, but the human 
factor was needed. Emotion’s need- 
ed, to react to the conditioning. From 
birth, by hypnosis, we’re conditioned 
to protect and serve the citizens. We 
couldn’t do anything else if we tried. 
It’s ingrained.” 

“Every citizen?” Fleming asked, 
and Nehral sighed. 

“That’s the trouble. Every citizen. 
The whole is equal to the sum total 
of the parts. One citizen, to us, rep- 
resents the entire group. I’m not cer- 
tain that this wasn’t a mistake of the 
builders. For when one citizen 
threatens the group — as Norman 
does — ” 

“But we’ve got to solve Norman’s 
problem.” 

“Yes. It’s our problem. Every cit- 
izen must have physical and mental 
balance — must. I was wondering — ” 

“Well?” 

“For the good of the whole, it 
would be better if Norman could 
be eliminated. On purely logical 
grounds, he should be allowed to go 
mad or die. I can’t countenance that, 
though. I’m too firmly conditioned 
against it.” 

“So am I,” Fleming said, and Neh- 
ral nodded. 

“Exactly. We must cure him. 
We’ve got to get him back to a sane 
psychological balance. Or we may 
crack up ourselves — because we’re 
not conditioned to react to failure. 
Now. You’re the youngest of us 
available ; you have more in common 
with the citizens than any of us. So, 
you may find an answer where we 
can’t.” 

“Norman should have been a Con- 
troller,” Fleming said. 



“Yes. But it’s too late for that 
now. He’s mature. His heredity — 
bad, from our viewpoint. Mathema- 
ticians and theologians. The prob- 
lems of every citizen in the city can 
be solved, with the Monuments. We 
can give them answers that are right 
for them. But Norman’s hunting 
an abstraction. That’s the trouble. 
We can’t give him a satisfactory 
ans7ver!” 

“Haven’t there ever been parallel 
psychoses — ” 

“It’s not a psychosis, tlrat’s the 
difficulty. Except by the arbitrary 
standards of the city. Oh, there’ve 
been plenty of human problems — a 
woman who wants children, for ex- 
ample, and can’t have them. If med- 
icine fails to help her, the Monu- 
ments will. By creating diversion — 
arousing her maternal instinct for 
something else, or channeling it else- 
where. By substitution. Making 
her believe she Iras a mission of some 
sort. Or creating an emotional at- 
tachment of another kind, not ma- 
ternal. The idea is to trace the 
problems back to their psychological 
roots, and then get rid of the frus- 
tration somehow. It’s the frustra- 
tion that’s fatal.” 

“Diversion, perhaps — ?” 

“I don’t think it’s possible. Nor- 
man’s problem is an abstraction. And 
if we answered it — he would go in- 
sane.” 

“I don’t know what my problem 
is,.” Norman said desperately. “I 
don’t have any. I'm young, healthy, 
doing work I like. I’m engaged — ” 
The psychologist scratched his 
jaw. "If we knew what your prob- 



JESTING PILOT 



83 



lem is, we could do something about 
it,” he said. “The most suggestive 
point here — ” He rustled through 
the papers before him. “Let's see. 
Do I seem real to you now ?” 

“Very,” Norman said. 

“But there are times — The syn- 
drome’s familiar. Sometimes you 
doubt reality. Most people have 
that feeling occasionally.” He leaned 
back and made thoughtful noises. 
Through the transparent wall the 
Fifth Monument was visible, pulsat- 
ing with soft beats of light. It was 
very quiet here. 

“You mean you don’t know what’s 
wrong with me,” Norman said. 

“I don’t know yet. But I will. 
First we must find out what your 
problem is.” 

“How long will tliat take? Ten 
years ?” 

“I had a problem myself once,” the 
psychologist said. “At the time 1 
didn’t know what it was. I’ve found 
out since. I was heading for mega- 
lomania ; I wanted to change people. 
So I took up this work. I turned mj 
energy into a useful channel. That 
solved my problem for me. It’s the 
right way for you, once we get at 
what’s bothering you.” 

“All I want is to get rid of these 
hallucinations,” Norman said. 

“Auditory, visual, and olfactory — 
mostly. And without e.xternal basis 
in fact. They're not illusions, they’re 
hallucinations. I wish you could give 
me more details about them.” 

“I can’t.” Norman seemed to 
shrink. “It’s like being dropped into 
boiling metal. It’s simply indescrib- 
able. An impression of noise, lights 

84 



— it conies and goes in a flash. But 
it’s a flash of hell.” 

“Tomorrow we’ll try narcosynihe 
sis again. I want to correlate my 
ideas in the meantime. It’s just 
possible — ” 

Norman stepped into a levitating 
current and was borne upward. At 
the level of the Fifth Monument’s 
upper balcony he stepped off. There 
.were a few people here, not man}', 
and they were busy with their own 
affairs — love-making and sight-see- 
ing. Norman rested his arms on the 
rail and stared down. He had come 
up here because of a vague, unlikeh 
hope that it would be quieter on tht 
high balcony far above the city. 

It was quiet, but no more so than 
the city had been. The rolling ways 
curved and slid smoothly beneath 
him. They were silent. Above him 
the Barrier was a gray, silent dome. 
He thought that gigantic claps oi 
thunder were pounding at the Bar- 
rier from outside, that the impreg 
nable hemisphere was beginning u 
crack, to buckle — to admit chaos in 
a roaring flood. 

He gripped the cool plastic rai! 
hard. Its solidity wasn’t reassuring 
In a moment the Barrier would splii 
wide open — 

There was no relief on the Monu 
ment. He glanced behind him at the 
base of the softly shining globe, with 
its rippling patterns of light, but 
that looked ready to shatter too. Ht 
stumbled as he jumped back into the 
drop-current. In fact, he missed ii 
entirely. There was a heart-stopping 
instant when he was in free fall ;theii 
a safety-paragravity locked tight on 

ASTOTJNDINO SCIRNC K-FICT I< i -\ 



his body and slid him easily into the 
current. He fell slowly. 

But he had a new thought now. 
Suicide. 

There were two questions involved. 
Did he want to commit suicide ? And 
would suicide be possible ? He stud- 
ied the second point. 

Without noticing, automatically 
he stepped on a moving way and 
dropped into one of the cushioned 
seats. No one died of violence in 
the city. No one ever had, as far as 
he knew. But had people tried to 
kill themselves ? 

It was a new, strange concept. 
There were so many safeties. No 
danger had been overlooked. There 
were no accidents. 

The road curved. Forty feet away, 
across a lawn and a low wall, was 
the Barrier. Norman stood up and 
walked toward it. He was conscious 
of both attraction and repulsion. 

Beyond the Barrier — 

He stopped. There it was, directly 
before him, a smooth, gray sub- 
stance without any mark or pattern. 
It wasn’t matter. It was something 
the builders had made, in the old 
days. 

What was it like outside? Six 
hundred years had passed since the 
Barrier was created. In that time, 
the rest of the world could have 
changed considerably. An odd idea 
struck him: suppose the planet had 
been destroyed? Suppose a chain 
reaction had finally volatilized it? 
Would the city have been affected? 
Or w’as the city, within that fantastic 
barrier, not merely shielded but ac- 
tually shifted into another plane of 
existence ? 



He struck his fist hard against the 
grayness ; it was like striking rubber. 
Without warning the terror engulfed 
him. He could not hear himself 
screaming . . . 

Afterward, he wondered how an 
eternity could be compressed into 
one instant. His .thoughts swung 
back to suicide. 

“Suicide?” Fleming said. 

Nehral’smindwas troubled. “Ecol- 
ogy fails,” he remarked. “I suppose 
the trouble is that the city’s a closed 
unit. We’re doing artificially what 
was a natural law six hundred years 
ago. But nature didn’t play favor- 
ites, as we’re doing. And nature 
used variables. Mutations, I mean. 
There weren’t any rules about intro- 
ducing new pieces into the game — in 
fact, there weren’t any rules about 
not introducing new rules. But here 
in the city we’ve got to stick by the 
original rules and the original pieces. 
If Bill Norman kills himself, I don’t 
know what may happen.” 

“To us?” 

“To us, and, through us, to the cit- 
izens. Norman’s psychologist can’t 
help him ; he’s a citizen, too. He 
doesn’t know — ” 

“What was his problem, by the 
way? The psychologist’s, I mean. 
He told Norman he’d solved it by 
taking up psychology.” 

“Sadism. We took care of that 
easily enough. We aroused his in- 
terest in the study of psychology. 
His mental index was so high we 
couldn’t give him surgery ; he needed 
a subtler intellectual release. But he’s 
thoroughly social and well-balanced 
now. The practice of psychology is 



JESTING PILOT 



85 




tain its efficiency. It was an outboard ‘ 
motor on a lifeboat. The storm 
rage. The motor strained, shrilled, 
sparked — screamed. The environ- 
ment was so completely artificial that 
no normal technology could have 
kept the balance. 

Six hundred years ago the build- 
ers had studied and discarded plan 
after plan. The maximum diameter 
of a Barrier was five miles. The 
vulnerability increased according to 
the square of the diameter. And in- 
vulnerability was the main factor. 

The city had to be built and main- 
tained as a self-sufficient unit within 
an impossibly small radius. 

Consider the problems. Self-suf- 
ficient. There were no pipe lines to 
outside. A civilization had to exist 
for an indefinite period in ts own 
waste products. Steamships, space- 
ships, are not parallels. They have to 



the sublimation he needed, and he’s 
very competent. However, he’ll never 
get at the root of Norman’s trouble. 
Ecology fails,” he repeated. “The re- 
lationship between an organism and 
its environment — irreconcilable, in 
this case. Hallucinations! Norman 
doesn’t have hallucinations. Or even 
illusions. He simply has rational pe- 
riods— luckily brief.” 

“It's an abnormal ecology any- 
way.” 

“It had to Itc. The city is un- 
inhabitable.” 



The city screamed! 

It was a microcosm, and it had to 
battle unimaginable stresses to main- 



86 



ASTOUNDING SCI ENCE-iaCTION 



make port and take in fresh supplies. 

This lifeboat would be at sea for 
much longer than six hundred years. 
And the citizens -- the survivors — 
must be kept not only alive, but 
healthy physically and mentally. 

The smaller the area, the higher 
the concentration. The builders could 
make the necessary machines. They 
knew how to do that. But such ma- 
chines had never been constructed 
before on the planet. Not in such 
concentration ! 

Civilization is an artificial environ- 
ment. With the machines that were 
necessary, the city became so artifi- 
cial that nobody could live in it. The 
builders got their efficiency ; they 
made the city so that it could exist 
indefinitely, supplying all the air, 
water, food and power required. The 
machines took care of that. 

But such machines ! 

The energy required and released 
was slightly inconceivable. It had to 
be released, of course. And it was. 
In light and sound and radiation — 
within the five-mile area under the 
Barrier. 

.\nyone living in the city would 
have developed a neurosis in two 
minutes, a psychosis in ten, and 
would have lived a little while longer 
than that. Thus the builders had an 
efficient city, but nobody could use it. 

There was one answer. 

Hypnosis. 

Everyone in the city was under 
hypnosis. It was selective telepathic 
hypnosis, with the so-called Monu- 
ments — powerful hypnopedic ma- 
chines — as the control devices. The 
survivors in the lifeboat didn’t know 

JESTING PILOT 



there was a storm. They saw only 
placid water on which the boat 
drifted smoothly. 

The city screamed to deaf ears. 
No one had heard it for six hundred 
years. No one had felt the radiation 
or seen the blinding, shocking light 
that flashed through the city. The 
citizens could not, and the Control- 
lers could not either, because they 
were blind and deaf and dumb, and 
lacking in certain other senses. They 
had their telepathy, their ESP, which 
enabled them to accomplish their task 
of steering the lifeboat. As for the 
citizens, their job was to survive. 

No one had heard the city scream- 
ing for six hundred years — except 
Bill Norman. 

“He has an inquiring mind,” Neh- 
ral said dryly. “Too inquiring. His 
problem’s an abstraction, as I’ve 
mentioned, and if he gets the right 
answer it’ll kill him. If he doesn’t, 
he’ll go insane. In either case, we’ll 
suffer, because we’re not conditioned 
to failure. The main hypnotic maxim 
implanted in our minds is that every 
citizen must survive. All right. 
You’ve got the facts now, Fleming. 
Does anything suggest itself ?” 

“I don’t have all the facts. What’s 
Norman’s problem ?” 

“He comes of dangerous stock,” 
Nehral answered indirectly. “The- 
ologians and mathematicians. His 
mind is ... a little too rational. As 
for his problem — well, Pilate asked 
the same question three thousand 
years ago, and I don’t recall his ever 
getting an answer. It’s a question 
that’s lain behind every bit of re- 
search since research first started. 

87 



But the answer lias never been fatal 
till now. Norman’s question is sim- 
ply this — 7vhat is truthf” 

There was a pause. Nehra! went 
on. 

“He hasn’t expressed it even to 
himself. He doesn’t know he’s ask- 
ing that question. But we know ; we 
have entree to Ills' mind. That’s the 
question that he’s finding insoluble, 
and the problem that’s bringing him 
gradually out of control, out of his 
hypnosis. So far there’ve been only 
flashes of realization. Split-second 
rational periods. Those are bad 
enough, for him. He’s heard and 
seen the city as it is — ” 

Another pause. Fleming’s thoughts 
stilled. Nehral said : 

“It’s the onl}' problem we can’t 
solve by hypnotic suggestion. We’ve 
tried. But it’s useless. Norman’s 
that remarkably rare person^ some- 
one who is looking for the truth.’’ 
Fleming said .slowly, “He’s look- 
ing for the truth. But — does he 
have — to find it ?’’ 

His thoughts raced into Nehral’s 
brain, flint against steel, and struck 
fire there. 

Three weeks later the psychologist 
pronounced Norman cured and he 
instantly married Mia. They went 
up to the Fifth Monument and held 
hands. 

“As long as you understand — ’’ 
Norman said. 

“I’ll go with you,’’ she told him. 
“Anywhere.” 

“Well, it won’t be tomorrow. I vvas 
going at it the wrong way. Imag- 
ine trying to tunnel out through the 
Barrier! No. I’ll have to fight fire 

88 



with tire. The Barrier’s the result 
of natural physical laws. There’s no 
secret about how it was created. But 
how to destroy it — that’s another 
thing entirely.” 

“They say it can’t be destroyed 
Some day it’ll disappear. Bill.” 

“When? I’m not going to wait 
for that. It may take me years, be- 
cause I’ll have to learn how to ust 
my weapons'. Years of study and 
practice and research. But I’ve got 
a purpose.” 

“You can’t become an expert nu- 
clear physicist overnight.” 

He laughed and put his arm around 
her shoulders, “I don’t expect to. 
First things come 'first. First I’ll 
have to learn to be a good physicist. 
Ehrlich and Pasteur and Curie — 
they had a drive, a motivation. So 
have I, now. I know what I want. 
I want out.” 

“Bill, if you should tail — ” 

“I expect to, at first. But in the 
end I won’t fail. I know what I 
want. Out!” 

She moved closer to him, and the\ 
were silent, looking down at the 
quiet, familiar friendliness of the 
city. I can stand it for a while, Nor- 
man thought. Especially with Mia. 
Now that the psychologist’s got rid 
of my trouble, I can settle doivn to 
work. 

Above them the rippling, soft 
light beat out from the great globe 
atop the Monument. 

“Mia—” 

“Yes?” 

“I know what I want now." 

“But he doesn’t know,” Fleming 
said. 

ASTOUNDING SCIBNCE-F I CT lO .\ 



“That’s all right,’’ Nehral said 
cheerfully. “He never really knew 
what his problem was. You found 
the answer. Not the one he want- 
ed, but the best one. Displacement, 
diversion, sublimation — the name 
doesn’t matter. It was the same 
treatment, basically, as turning sadis- 
tic tendencies into channels of bene- 
ficial surgery. We’ve given Norman 
his comproihise. He still doesn’t 
know what he’s looking for, but he’s 
been hypnotized into believing that 
he can find it outside the city. Put 
food on top of a wall, out of reach 
of a starving man, and you’ll get a 
neurosis. But if you give the man 
materials for building a ladder, his 
energy will be deflected into a pro- 
ductive channel. Norman will spend 
all his life in research, and probably 
make some valuable discoveries. He’s 
sane again. He’s under the preven- 
tive hypnosis.- And he’ll die think- 
ing there’s a way out.’’ 

“Through the Barrier? There 
isn’t.’’ 

“Of course there isn’t. But Nor- 
man could accept the hypnotic sug- 
gestion that there was a way, if only 
he could find it. We’ve given him 
the materials to build his ladder. 
He’ll fail and fail, but he’ll never 
really get discouraged. He’s looking 
for truth. We’ve toldjiim he can 



find truth outside the Barrier, and 
that he can find a way out. He’s 
happy now. He’s stopped rocking 
the lifeboat.” 

“Truth . . Fleming said, and 
then, “Nehral — I’ve been wonder- 
ing.” 

“What?” 

“Is there a Barrier?” 

Nehral said, “But the city’s sur- 
vived! Nothing from outside has 
ever come through the Barrier — ” 
“Suppose there isn’t a Barrier,” 
Fleming said. “How would the city 
look from outside? Like a ... a 
furnace, perhaps. It’s uninhabitable. 
We can’t conceive of the real city, 
ally more than the hypnotized citi- 
zens can. Would you walk into a 
furnace ? Nehral, perhaps the city’s 
its own Barrier.” 

“But we sense the Barrier. The 
citizens see the Barrier—” 

“Do they? Do — we? Or is that 
part of the hypnosis too, a part we 
don’t know about? Nehral — I don’t 
know. There may be a Barrier, and 
it may disappear when its half-time 
is run. But suppose we just think 
there’s a Barrier ?” 

“But — ” Nehral said, and stopped. 
“That would meafi — Norman might 
find a way out !” 

“I wonder if that was what the 
builders planned?” Fleming said. 



THE END. 



SPACEHOUNDS OF IPC 

E. E. Smith’s long novel, “Spacehounds of IPC,” has at last appeared in 
book form. The story has been almost totally unobtainable for some ten years; 
in the Smith tradition, it’s a bang-up yarn. The science-fiction books are begin- 
ning to appear, but this one is a 2000-copy limited edition. Fantasy Press of 
Reading, Pa., published it. It’s $3.00, and if yours is order #2001, you’ll wait 
another ten years. 



JESTING rn.OT 



89 




PSEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND 



BY WILLY LEY 



The Nariis did accomplish a- remarkable series of scientific 
advances. Willy Ley explains, in part, how come. Nani research 
seems to have been strictly on the shotgun technique; if you shoot 
enough holes in the unknoxim, something's apt to drop in your lap. 
And the Nanis tided everything — anything, no matter how zeild! 



Illustrated by Tiedeman 



\\'lien things get so tough that 
there seems to be no way out, the 
Russian embraces the vodka bottle, 
the Frenchman a woman and the 
American the Bible. 

The German tends to resort to 
magic, to some nonsensical belief 
•which he tries to validate by way of 
hysterics and physical force. Not 
every German, of course. Not even 
a majority, but it seems to me that 
the percentage of people so inclined 

90 



is higher in Germany than in other 
countries. It was the willingness of 
a noticeable proportion of the Ger- 
mans to rate rhetoric above research, 
and intuition above knowledge, that 
brought to power a political party 
which was frankly and loudly anti- 
intellectual. The Nazis not only 
burned books they disliked, they also 
classified theoretical physicists with 
“Jews and Marxists.” 

Small wonder the pseudoscientists 

ASTOUNDING SC lUN CE -I'lC'l' 10 N 






experienced a heyday under such a 
regime — but it would be a mistake 
to beleive that these pseudosciences 
which 1 am going to describe, origi- 
nated with the Nazis. They existed, 
and to some extent even flourished, 
before Hitler. But then they were 
hemmed in by the authority of the 
scientists — after Hitler had become 
Fiihrer it was almost the other way 
round. 

When speaking about German 
pseudoscience I am not thinking so 
much of the usual run of astrologers, 
fortune tellers, theosophers and dev- 
otees to occultism. Of course there 
was a theosophical society — or rather 
a few branches hurling noncompli- 
ments at one another — there were as- 
trological magazines and presumably 
astrological societies. There were 
struggling clairvoyants, mostly 
struggling among themselves by way 
of the printed word and resulting 
lawsuits — I won’t judge, but I should 
think that they should have known 
the outcome — and there was an 
occultistic magazine vainly trying to 
make peace and “advance the cause.” 

Representatives of all these groups 
existed in Germany before World 
War I and began to flourish during 
World War I. They kept flourish- 
ing during the inflationary period, 
received a slight setback during the 
few years of mild prosperity in the 
Twenties, and flourished again dur- 
ing the years leading up to Hitler. 
Under Hitler they did not do so 
well and some groups were even out- 
lawed. If my information is correct, 
the astrologers found themselves 
among the outlawed groups, al- 
though everybody inside Germany 

r.SEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND 



as well as outside knew that Hitler 
and Himmler had a personal astrol- 
oger, reportedly a man whose name 
happened to be Fiihrer, a Dr. W. 
Fiihrer who also was “Plenipoten- 
tiary for Mathematics, Astronomy 
and Physics.” 

The pseudosciences I have in mind 
are not these internationally distrib- 
uted permanent fads, but some which 
originated in Germany and, while not 
completely unknown elsewhere, had 
a special appeal to Germans, in about 
the same sense in which it might be 
said that the pyramidologists are a 
British prerogative. 

Much of their appeal must have 
been based on semantic connota- 
tions ; it is difficult even to translate 
the names of these “sciences” 
properly. 

The most important of them were 
Pendelforschung — Pendulum Re- 
search, Hohlweltlehre — Hollow 
Earth Doctrine, and Welteislehre — 
usually abbreviated as WEL, trans- 
latable approximately as World Ice 
Doctrine. But before devoting any 
space to these more outstanding 
“achievements” I have to clean up 
a few minor but not less surprising 
matters. 

In the days before the Nazis be- 
came important the term “Arioso- 
phy” could be seen occasionally in 
some newspapers. Then, one day, 
there was a small ad, announcing a 
lecture on Ariosophy by a man 
whose name I forget. It was stated 
that he was a disciple of the founder 
of Ariosophy, Dr. Jdrg Lanz von 
Liebenfels. It was also stated that 

91 



pi'iests would not be admitted to the 
lecture. 

The lecturer, who tried hard to 
look like'AlbrechtDiirer, the famous 
but long-dead German painter, began 
his lecture with the statement that 
there were several human races but 
that skin color is not the most im- 
portant criterion for distinguishing 
the races. Then he launched into an 
explanation of the hidden impor- 
tance of language, saying that fig- 
ures of speech contain deep truths 
which,. in everyday usage, are usu^ 
ally overlooked. People say, for 
example, “I can’t stand that man’s 
smell” — remember, the lecture was 
in German, where that figure of 
speech is used to express personal 
dislike for somebody, a dislike lack- 
ing specific rational reasons — well, 
that just indicates the otherwise for- 
gotten fact that the various races 
have different smells, in short it ex- 
presses revulsion at the other man’s 
race. 

By that time the lecture had got 
around to the word -Man — in Ger- 
man Mensch — and he jwinted out 
that there was a rare word manschen 
which means to mix — soiu.ething un- 
savory — and with a long jump from 
linguistics into the Bible manschen 
and Mcnscli were connected. Hu- 
manity, it turned out, was the result 
of a — forbidden — mixture of angels 
and animals. Each person has a small 
percentage of angel and a large per- 
centage of animal. The races indi- 
cate roughly what the percentages 
are, a “true race” consists of indi- 
viduals of about the same percentage 
which seek each other out. Obvi- 
ously any small community is apt to 

62 



harbor individuals of about the same 
“race” ; pure Aryans, like, for exam- 
ple, the inhabitants of mountain vil- 
lages in Norway, may be as^high as 
one per cent angel. 

You can easily see how and where 
such dream-reasoning fitted into the 
Nzai philosophy; to my surprise no 
Party Group or Nazi community 
ever erected a statue in honor of Dr. 
Jdrg Lanz von Liebenfels — whose 
real name may have been Ignaz 
Donnerwetter. 

The Ariosophers could at least 
quote a few Biblical passages in sup- 
port of their ideas — they stated that 
their founder had been a Catholic 
priest before “he saw the light.” The 
next group was literally founded 
upon a novel. That group which 1 
think called itself W ahrheitsgesell- 
scliaft — Society for Truth — and. 
which was more or less localized in 
Berlin, devoted its spare time look- 
ing for Vril, Yes, their convictions 
were founded upon Bulwer-Lytton’s 
“The Coming Race.” They knew 
that the book was fiction, Bulwer- 
Lytton had used that device in order 
to be able to tell the truth about 
this “power.” The subterranean hu- 
manity was nonsense, Vril was not. 
Possibly it had enabled the British, 
who kept it as a State secret, to 
amass their colonial empire. Surel\- 
the Romans had had it, inclosed in 
small metal balls, which guarded 
their homes and were referred to a.< 
lares. For reasons which I failed to 
penetrate, the secret of Vril could be 
found by contemplating the struc- 
ture of an apple, sliced in halves. 

No, I am not joking, that is what 
I was told w'ith great solemnity and 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 




secrecy. Such a group actually ex- 
isted, they even got out the first» issue 
of a magazine which was to proclaim 
their credo. (I wish I had kept some 
of these things; but I had enough 
hooks to smuggle out as it was.) 

And now we are ready for 
C rndelforschutig. 

As translated above, the word 
means Pendulum Research, which 
sounds like a serious scientific occu- 
pation — say a branch of mechanics. 
What it meant Avas this: if you sus- 
])ended a piece of gold, say a plain 
wedding ring, from a thread of pure 
silk, the ]>endulum would reveal “se- 
crets.” To work it you placed both 
elbows on the table and placed the 

PSEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND 



fingertips of your two hands to- 
gether, fingers slightly spread apart. 
The silk thread was put between the 
tips of the middle fingers and then 
an object, say a photograph, was 
placed upside down' under the sus- 
pended ring. After a little while the 
pendulum would describe a figure, 
either a circle or an ellipse. The 
circle was male, the ellipse female. 
The figure corresponded to the sex 
of the person on the picture. 

If it didn’t, the picture either 
showed a very masculine woman or 
a very feminine man. The method 
could be used to establish whether 
two people who wanted to get mar- 
ried, would harmonize, whether em- 



•3 



ployer and employee would get along 
and a thousand other things. I was 
informed, for example, why my 
wrist watch did not want to go. It 
was “male” too. 1 .ater, an uninitiated 
watchmaker also found a bent shaft. 

For further development see the 
report by Gerard P. Kuiper on “Ger- 
man Astronomy During the War,” 
pul)lished in Popular Astroitomv. 
Vol. LI V, No. 6, June, 1946: 

Otlicr groups (of the German navy) 
including officers of flag rank, supported 
Pendelforsclnmg : a large map of the At- 
lantic was spread out horizontally, with 
a onc-inch toy battleship as test object. 
A i>cndulum, consisting of a cube of metal 
about one cubic centimeter and a short 
string, was swung above the battleship. 
If the )K-ndulum reacted, it proved the 
presence of a true battleship at that loca- 
tion. 

The // oltkuelilclirc — Flollow Earth 
Doctrine — was invented, as far as I 
was ,Tnle to find out, in about 1920. 
Its main tenet was : the Earth is real, 
everything else is an optical illusion. 
The Earth was a spherical bubble, 
of the same dimensions which “or- 
thodox geography” ascribes to it, in 
an infinity of solid rock. Humanity 
lived on the inside of that bubble 
which was precisely like an “ortho- 
dox globe,” but seen from the inside. 
Three bodies moved near the center 
of that empty bubble, the Sun, the 
Moon, and the “phantom Universe,” 
a dark-blue sphere with little lights 
on it, mistaken for the fixed stars. 
Night was caused by the phantom 
Universe obscuring the Sun for a 
part ot the Earth ; eclipses by the 
shadow of the phantom Universe 
falling upon the Moon. 

The “wrong impression” which we 
have about the Universe is caused 

iSA 



by the mistake of thinking that light 
rays are straight. All rays are al- 
ways curved, their radius of curva- 
ture being on the order of of the 
Earth’s radius. Because of the curved 
rays we see distorted projections of 
things which result in the “astro- 
nomical universe” because we always 
straightened the light rays out. More, 
distortions result from the fact that 
violet rays have a stronger curvature 
than red rays. 

And now a direct quote — from 
memory — from the final.chapter of 
the treatise I saw : “Old folk talcs 
often speak of the time when God 
still walked on Earth. We know that 
the Earth-Universe expands, even 
Einstein admits that. What is more 
logical then, than to take the old folk 
tales at face value and assume that 
they refer to a time when the Earth- 
Universe was smaller and the dis- 
tance from the central luminosities to 
the surface less than it is now ?” 

For further developments here is 
an excerpt from Gerard P. Kuiper’s 
report : 

Certain German naval circles believed in 
the Hohlwelttheorie. .They considered it 
helpful to locate the British fleet, be- 
cause the curvature of tlie Earth would 
not obstruct observation. Visual r.iys 
were not suitable because of refraction; 
but infrared rays had less refraction. 
Accordingly a party of about ten men un- 
der the scientific leadership of Dr. Heinz 
Fischer, an infrared expert, was sent out 
from Berlin to the isle of Rugen to 
photograph the British fleet with infra- 
red equipment at an upward angle of 
some forty-five degrees. 

The remaining phenomenon of 
German pseudoscience, the Wclteis- 
lehre or WEL is in many respects 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



the most remarkable. It had literally 
millions of fanatical supporters who 
would interrupt educational meetings 
with concerted yelling, “Out With 
Astronomical Orthodoxy, Give Us 
Horbiger,” it owned and maintained 
an Information Bureau in Vienna, it 
maintained a monthly magazine — 
The Key to World Events — of large 
circulation, it produces three or four 
“scientific,” close to forty “popular” 
books and several dozen throw-away 
pamphlets. The leaders of the WEL 
wrote openly threatening letters ; I 
once saw one — not addressed to me 
— in which the director of a govern- 
ment institute was told “once we 
have won, you and your kind will go 
begging.” And the founder of it all, 
Hanns Horbiger, with whom I was 
in correspondence about rockets for 
some time, bared the WEL’s chief 
doctrine once in a letter in which he 
wrote: “either you believe me and 
learn, or you must be treated as an 
enemy.” And I know of a minor 
businessman who hired help only if 
the prospective employee, to use his 
own words, “had assured him that 
he or she felt friendly about the 
World Ice.” 

It was in 1913 that one Philipp 
Fauth, school teacher and amateur 
astronomer — with some reputation 
as a Moon specialist — published a 
book of about eight hundred pages, 
about the size and weight of one 
volume of the Britannica. It was 
entitled Horbiger’s Glazial-Kos- 
mogonie. Much of it had actually 
been written by Horbiger, an Aus- 
trian mining engineer who at first 
said very politely that he had tried 
to solve the riddles of the Universe, 

PSEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND 



especially the formation of planets, 
geological history and meteorology 
with engineering principles. Later 
on he claimed that recognition had 
been denied him because he was an 
engineer and not an astronomical 
theorist. I may add 'that both his 
publications and his letters revealed 
clearly that he was not even a good 
engineer. 

The outbreak of World War I 
killed interest in this first publication 
which was later referred to as the 
Main Work. After the first World 
War Hanns Horbiger, equipped with 
a long white beard and a handwrit- 
ing which was calculated to impress 
amateur graphologers, appeared on 
the scene like a political party, with 
leaflets and posters, publicity machin- 
ery and everything. If anybody 
doubted him he shouted : “Instead of 
trusting me you trust equations ! 
How long will you need to learn that 
mathematics is valueless and decep- 
tive?” The “practical engineer” 
Horbiger never calculated anything, 
it was his loudest and proudest claim. 

One of his pupils, an architect, 
told aw'ed and large audiences that 
Hdrbiger’s information about the 
tnie state of the Universe was based 
entirely on intuition. As a boy, he 
said, the Master had a small tele- 
scope with which he looked at the 
Moon. Then, suddenly, he realized 
that what he saw was ice, cold ice, 
the whole MoOn was made of ice. 
He glanced at blinding Venus which 
was still in the sky; Venus too was 
cold and brilliant ice. Years later, 
Horbiger was asleep, dreaming about 
astronomy. He saw the Earth as a 
pendulum suspended from a lumi- 

95 




nous thread and saw it swing, in 
longer and longer swings. It swung 
to Jupiter, and to Saturn and be- 
yond, but when it swung to three 
times the distance of Neptune the 
string broke. Hdrbiger awakened 
and realized that the Sun’s attraction 
stops at that distance. 

When I asked Hdrbiger by mail 
whether these claims were true, he 
replied modestly saying, “Yes, that 
way the truth was revealed to me, 
but the clue factor was when, as a 
young engineer, I saw molten iron 
run over waterlogged earth with 
patches of snow on it and observed 
that the wet lumps of soil exploded 
with a delay and with great violence.” 



What did Hdrbiger actually say r 
Here is his tale : 

Many millions of years ago there 
existed in the constellation Columba 
a super giant^sun, millions of times 
as large and heavy as our sun. Near 
that sun there was a gigantic planet, 
many times as heavy as Jupiter, cov- 
ered by layers of ice hundreds of 
miles thick and water-logged all 
through.' This planet fell into its 
sun and settled at a depth corre- 
sponding to its specific gravity. Its 
water and ice was changed into 
super-heated steam, but nothing hap- 
pened for more millions of years. 
Then the equilibrium was disturbed 
for some reason, and the super- 



08 



ASTOUNDING SCIRNCE-FICT rO?' 



heated steam blew the old planet and 
the layers of sun material above it 
into space, as a whirling mass. This 
was the birth of our sun and our 
solar system. Much of the original 
planet mass had been metal dxides, 
the heat released the oxygen and the 
oxygen combined with the thin at- 
mosphere of hydrogen which fills all 
space into water which then froze. 

Through many successive stages 
our solar system evolved, with more 
than thirty planets. Surrounding the 
system at about right angles there is 
a mighty ring of blocks of cosruic 
ice, hovering a little beyond three 
times the distance of Neptune. It is 
this ring of ice blocks which astron- 
omers believe to be the Milky Way 
Ijecause a few normal stars like our 
sun shine through the ice ring. Ac-, 
tually the Milky Way has never been 
and will never be resolved in a tele- 
scope ; photographs claiming to show 
the individual stars of the Milky 
Way are fakes. Because of the re- 
sistance of the hydrogen in space a 
number of these ice blocks is suffi- 
ciently retarded to be caught in the 
Sun’s gravitational field and finally 
to fall into the Sun. Each such ice 
block impact causes a sunspot — even 
astronomers admit that the sunspots 
are cooler than their surroundings — 
and the sunspots have an eleven-year 
cycle because of Jupiter who needs 
the same time to circle the Sun. 

Of planets there are two types, the 
Heliodes or inner planets, mostly 
metal and metal compounds, and the 
Neptodes or outer planets, consist- 
ing almost entirely of ice. Hence 
their low specific gravity, which is 

f.SEUDOSCIENCE IN NAZILAND 



about -that of ice.* If an ice block 
on its way to the Sun happens to hit 
Earth, we get a devastating hail- 
storm, as proved by the fact that 
hailstorms often move in straight 
lines. But the ice block which fell 
into the Sun does not stay there, it 
evaporates and is blown out through 
the funnel of the sunspot as a jet^of 
hot- water vapor which freezes in 
space and forms the Fine Ice. Both 
Mercury and Venus, being so dose 
ot the Sun, are completely covered 
with it. W’hen it hits Earth, the Fine 
Ice produces those very high cirrus 
clouds, in fact the diameter of Earth 
would grow by about six inches 
every year because of Fine Ice if 
water did not disappear in the 
Earth’s interior at the .same rate. 

Earth’s position is unique, not only 
because of that lucky balance. ■* If it 
were closer to the Sun, it would be 
covered by Fine Ice like Venus. If 
it were farther out, it would be hit 
more often by ice’blocks and be cov- 
ered by an ice ocean several miles 
deep like Mars. The continents of 
Mars are merely permanent ice con- 
tinents, the canals are cracks in the 
ice. Our Moon is covered with ice 
like Mars, being originally an inde- 
pendent planet which has been cap- 
tured. Because of the resistance of 
the hydrogen in space, the Moon will 
ultimately crash on Earth ; that will 
be the end of all life. Several smaller 
moons preceded our Moon, fortu- 
nately they were too small to kill all 

* I asked Horbiger alx>ut Saturn whose aver- 
age density is less than that of water. Hor- 
biger replied that “orthodox astronomers” would 
probably say that they don’t know the height 
of the atmosphere, but that he would explain 
later why Saturn is in a gravitational shadow. 

»7 



life; their masses formed what we 
now call geological deposits. 

The most recent Moon cataclysm 
was witnessed by primitive Man ; the 
Norse legends about Gotterdamme- 
rung and the apocalyptic visions rep- 
resent attempts to describe this event. 
They were written after the present 
moon had been captured — its capture 
caused Atlantis to sink — and the 
people who wrote them knew that 
the experience of the past was- also a 
prophecy of the future. 

To pick flaws in this theory is 
about as easy — and as pleasant — as 
gathering Jafianese beetles from an 
infested flowerbed. At first German 
scientists amused themselves by com- 
piling long lists of Horbigerian im- 
possibilities. But they grew serious 
and even alarmed when the VVEL 
suddenly assumed the proportions of 
a ]iowerful popular movement in 
pseudo-intellectual circles. And after 
Hitler had come to power, the WEL 
adherents declared threateningly that 
now everybody MUST believe Hor- 
biger, or else. “Our Nordic ances- 
tors grew strong in ice and snow ; 
belief in the World Ice is conse- 
quently the natural heritage of Nor- 
dic Man.” “Just as it needed a child 

THE 



of Austrian culture — Hitler ! — lo 
put the Jewish politicians in their 
place, so it needed an Austrian to 
cleanse the world of Jewish science.” 
“The Fiihrer, by his very life, has 
proved how much a so-called ‘ama- 
teur’ can be superior to self-styled 
professionals; it needed another 
‘amateur’ to give us complete under- 
standing of the universe.” 

Maybe Hitler did not like the term 
“amateur,” at any event the WEI . 
people did not find the going as ca.sy 
as they had hoped. The Propaganda 
Ministry even stated once that “one 
can . be a good National Socialist 
without believing in the WEL.” The 
astronomer Robert Henseling con- 
tinued to struggle against the WEI., 
universities continued to teach “or- 
thodox astronomy,” but the WEL 
remained popular to the bitter end. 
The WEL claimed that its princii)lcs 
permitted reliable “general” — as dis- 
tinct from local — weather forecasts 
for months and even years in ad- 
vance. Their organization did pub- 
lish such forecasts, and a good num- 
ber of young meteorologists toyed 
with the W’orld Ice. But they' failed 
to foresee that winter which broke 
Hitler’s back on the Russian plains. 

END. 



SLAN! 

A. E. van Vogt’s most famous novel, “Sian” !, is at last available in book 
form. If you read it in Astounding, you’ll want the hard-cover book form; if 
you missed it in Astounding, you’ve finally got a chance to get it. It’s available 
at or through book stores or from Arkham House, Sauk City, Wisconsin. But 
don't write us for it. It’s $2.50. 

Almost simultaneously, Hadley Publishing Company, 271 Doyle Avc., Provi- 
dence 6, R. I., has brought out another one of van Vogt’s top novels — “The 
Weapon Makers.” The same comments as above apply to this one, with the 
following addition ; Hadley, a smaller publishing house, has turned out a limited 
edition — and the limited isn’t in quotes. This one’s $3.00. 

as 



ASTOUNDINCJ S C IRNrE-HIOT I ON 



BY CHAN DAVIS 




Illustrated by Orban 



THE 

lOURNEY AND THE GOAL 



The journey from Titan to Earth was 
Jong and hard anyway — but the colonists 
xcere forbidden to make it. Two, defying 
all laxes tried it — and found that there 
arc two Icinds of laws: Man’s xeliich can 
be broken, and Nature’ s~xchich can’t. 



Jack and Evlyn met after work to 
go up together to the Observatory. 

This trip was a regular thing for 
them, partly a habit, like any ritual, 
init mostly a holy pilgrimage. Jack 
had been making it ever since the 
time, fifteen years before, when his 
father had first told him of the many 
other worlds far in space outside 
their own. The tales had wakened 
his imagination, and his father, hard 
put to it by some of the boy’s ques- 

THB JOCRNEV .V.VD THE GO.M. 



tions, had one day answered Jack’s 
pleas and taken him to the “Sky 
lioom.” There was a man named 
Creeden at the Observatory who had 
been willing and able to answer his 
questions, and — there had been the 
tiny, inconceivably distant stars. Mr. 
Creeden had shown him the planets 
through the telescope, and had smiled 
at the rush of questions which each 
one brought forth. Eagerly, Jack 
had looked and listened, wishing si- 

A.ST 99 



leiitly that it was possible for him to 
go himself to all these strange worlds, 
to see himself all these incredible 
things of which he was told. 

The longing had lasted. Even when 
Jack had had to start work in the 
mines, his friendship and almost ap- 
prenticeship to Mr. Creeden had con- 
tinued. He had studied ; slowly, be- 
cause there was so much he did not 
know, and with difficulty, because at 
first he had patience only for the 
stars themselves and not for the 
seemingly unrelated subjects which 
Mr. Creeden insisted he must also 
know. Creeden had told hjm that in 
the place from which he had come 
Jack would have been able to spend 
all his time in studying instead of ' 
working in the mines, and neither 
would his teachers have had other 
duties beside education. Jack came 
to hate, as Creeden did, the dictator, 
Montiel, who denied them all this. 
The hate, like the curiosity, was part 
of Jack’s longing, but always strong- 
est was the dream of some day cross- 
ing space. 

And then he had met Evlyn Win- 
ters and told her of his longing, and 
she had understood it, she had shared 
it : and it had become, no longer Jack 
Rowell’s dream, but the dream of 
Jack and Evlyn. And when, later, 
they had gazed upw'ard at the great, 
starred sky of night and said, like 
many more before them, “We shall 
live together always,’’ they had 
thought, not of a life in this place 
that was their birthplace and their 
home, but of a life there, up there, 
of a new home on one of the distant, 
shining worlds of the sky. 

They planned, and made a kind of 



joke out of working great detail into 
the plans, just as if there was hope 
that they might be fulfilled. Yet the 
serious core of the thing was always 
there; repeatedly they were shocked 
by the enduring intensity of it, by 
the unabating lure of the impossible. 

Inevitably, their thoughts turned 
finally to one in particular of the 
planets they saw. For they knew 
that only there could they breathe 
the native air — stride barefoot the 
living soil — look at the stars direct, 
without inevitable intervening panes 
of artificial glass. Anywhere else 
they must dwell always within pro- 
tecting metal domes, air-tight, insu- 
lated, and sterile, and eat none but 
synthetic foods ; they must, in short, 
live as they were living here, on the 
planet Titan. Oh, it was natural 
that Jack and Evlyn should have 
turned to that one particular planet ; 
the home of their ancestors — Earth. 

Creeden was sitting before the 
calculator when Jack and Evlyn got 
there. He glanced up as they en- 
tered. 

“Hello, Tony,” .said Jack, and 
“Hello, Mr. Creeden,” said Evlyn. 

“Come on in,” Creeden responded, 
strangely without his usual cheer, 
and punched a few more keys. “You 
can go out to the observatory and 
wait, if you want to ; I have to finish 
the landing trajectory for the FB- 
916 .” 

“When’s she due in ?” 

“About five hours, I think. Tell 
you when I’m through.” This time 
he hadn’t even looked up ; Jack and 
Evlyn didn’t bother him further. 

The observatory was kept evacu- 



100 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



lied, like those of Luna. The inside 
of the telescope had to be evacuated 
anyway, exposed as it must be to the 
emptiness that is where Titan’s at- 
mosphere would be if Titan had an 
atmosphere. And, that being the case, 
all parts of the scope proper had to 
be open to empty space too, to avoid 
sharp temperature dififerentials that 
could ruin the optical jjroperties or 
even crack the mirror. Temperature 
was still a problem. During the 
Titanian day the scope had to be 
carefully shaded, lest the sun’s radi- 
ant heat warm it unevenly. 

Jack and Evlyn put on two of the 
spacesuits that were stacked beside 
the air lock, then stepped through 
into blackness. Jack groped, pressed 
a stud l)eside the door — and stars 
flowed brilliantly across the ceiling. 
Jack fejt again the old wonder. He 
knew that really nothing had hap- 
])ened, the roof had merely slid back 
into the low wall. But it seemed as 
if the whole universe of light had 
been poured into the room with them. 

The sun was not up, it had not 
Ijeen for fifteen “days” now. If it 
had been, they would not be here 
like this; the one time Jack had 
looked at the sun he had had to close 
his eyes against the demonic bright- 
ness of it. The sun was not up, but 
Saturn loomed low over the eastern 
horizon, in the position it always 
occupied. It seemed to fill half the 
sky with its soft-limned streaks of 
pastel red and blue. To Jack’s eyes, 
used to the dimness of a planet 
where power was at a premium, it 
looked garish even beside the un- 
restrained, overflowing whiteness of 
the stars. Old faithful Saturn, for- 



ever hogging Titan’s sky. And some- 
where out there, Earth modest among 
the thousand stars, too dim to find 
unless you knew its position in ad- 
vance, too distant for you to distin- 
guish its vague disk or crescent ; but 
certainly there, somewhere. Some- 
where, too, was the ship which had 
left the Mother World ^uch a short 
time before. 

They looked for a long minute, 
then turned back toward the air lock. 
Jack looked back once, and felt pity 
for his friends in the mine who had 
never seen the sky. 

Just inside the door they, stopped. 
Creeden had just extracted from the 
machine a centimeter-wide strip, 
whose twin was now being fed to the 
calculator. Silently, invisibly, the 
machine calculated a course for a 
spaceship thousands of miles away. 

Creeden stood, and crossed the 
room to file the strip. Jack had long 
since grown used to the Earthman’s 
short stature — not even two meters 
— but he could see it still startled 
Evlyn. And to think that on Earth 
Creeden would be considered tall! 

Ordinarily Crebden would have put 
on a spacesuit and gone with them 
back to the scope, or else taken them 
up to the photography room. He did 
neither. Instead, he motioned them 
to take ofif their suits and sit down 
in the weblike, fragile-looking metal 
chairs beside his desk. When they 
had done so, he gave an odd smile 
and said abruptly, “Montiel won’t 
let you go to Earth, you know.” 

Jack and Evlyn looked dumbly at 
each other ; they had never told any- 
one of their dream. 



rllE .TOUKNEY .\ND THE GOAL 



101 



“Oh, I know you’ve been thinking 
about it,” Creeden went on with calm 
understatement. “I’ve overheard 
some of the things you’ve said, and 
I knew long ago that Jack had some- 
thing like that in the back of his 
mind. But you can’t do it.” 

“We know that,” said Evlyn. 

“Do you know why?” 

“Yes,” answered Jack. “Montiel 
knows that if he allows emigration 
he may not have enough men left to 
run his mines, because no new 
colonists are coming here any more.” 
“There’s a story behind that, too. 
You may not know the whole thing, 
so I’d better tell it from the begin- 
ning.” And he told how, long be- 
fore, when man was first extending 
his rule from Earth to the other 
planets of the system, the World 
State had broken down into rival 
factions, just as Seventeenth Cen- 
tury English companies had com- 
peted with each other in the develop- 
ment of what was then the New 
World. But this time the schisms 
had lasted. The 'Asian Common- 
wealth had established its rule over 
half of Mars, most^of the remainder 
going finally to the European Union. 
America — a nation actually compris- 
ing only about half of the continent 
of that name — had had to be con- 
tented with a disappointingly barren 
Venus, plus a small share of Luna; 
so, impatient for further conquest, 
it had reached for the outer planets. 

The asteroids, surprisingly enough, 
proved to be valuable as refrigera- 
tors — large-scale sources of liquid 
oxygen and other low-boiling liquids. 
Encouraged, America had struck 
outward again. The other nations 

102 



had not followed just then, for, 
having temporarily neglected rock- 
etry research in the all-out exploita- 
tion of their new colonies, they had 
no ships capable of making the 
Jupiter trip at opposition. When 
Titan was finally colonized, it was 
by Americans, with Jack’s and 
Evljm’s grandparents among them. 
The new world had sent back pure, 
titanium, a rarity on Earth, and a 
scarce isotope of mercury; and it 
had prospered. , . 

Creeden broke off the narrative as 
the calculator emitted a series of 
sharp clicks, indicating that the -tape 
was finished. He went over, took it 
out, and inserted it in the coder 
which he had previously connected 
to the microwave transmitter. The 
co-ordinates of the landing trajec- 
tory would now automatically be 
beamed from the antenna outside 
the dome to the incoming spaceship. 
Creeden sat down again and pro- 
ceeded. 

Titan’s trade had been limited to 
America, but it had not been many 
years before the Titanians realized 
that the other nations, too, were 
good markets for their products. 
They had rebelled, under Montiel’s 
father; America had made little ef- 
fort to keep them subject, and they 
had set up their own government, 
like several other planet-colonies l>e- 
f ore them ; Montiel’s father had be- 
come the first dictator, though he 
had not been called that at first. 
Again Titan prospered — until dis- 
aster struck. 

The mercury isotope which had 
been their most profitable product 
was obtained on Earth as the end 

A.STOUNDIXG SCIENCE-FICTION 



product of a radioactive disintegra- 
tion series. It could be manufac- 
tured cheaply and simply in a small 
pile, wherever it was needed. Titan’s 
mercury became valueless. The 
young nation was reduced to export- 
ing titanium — a bulky substance, 
therefore wasteful of rocket fuel. 
They were forced to live a Spartan 
life, using a minimum of food, 
power, and even air. Immigration 
abruptly stopped, and, in compensa- 
tion, those already present were for- 
bidden to leave. The dictatorship 
was established and the dictators 
blamed all the unpleasant economies 
on Earth’s imagined effort to starve 
the independent state into submis- 
sion. 

Here Jack interrupted the history 
with a thought which had been 
bothering him for the past few 
minutes: “Say, Tony, if you knew 
all along about our wanting to return 
to Earth” — he said “return” uncon- 
sciously — “why didn’t you ever say 
anything about it before?” 

“There’s a reason for my bringing 
it up just now,” Creeden smiled ; and 
the way he jjhrased his answer 
brought Jack the first glimmerings 
of a wild hope. “You’ll see what 1 
mean in just a minute. Let me go 
on.” 

“You may not know that we’re in 
a worse position now than we ever 
were before. We have nothing to 
offer but titanium. Well, that’s a 
pretty common element everywhere, 
the only difficulty lies in extracting 
it from Martian and Earthian ores. 
Recently there’s been work done on 
improved methods of extraction. 

THE JOURNEY .\ND THE GOAL 



Pretty promising work. You see 
where that leaves us. 

“Montiel won’t face the possibility 
that Titan may have to become a 
dead world. He’s trying to keep 
down the inner planets’ demand for 
new sources of titanium by increas- 
ing our output. That’s why you’re 
working longer hours than your 
parents did ; that’s why I'm working 
in the mines part time now ; that’s 
also why Montiel’s kee])ing news 
of the danger from the people. He 
doesn’t want anyone to consider 
leaving now.” 

“Is anyone considering leaving?” 
asked Jack. 

“Yes.” 

“Yourself among them.” 

“That’s right,” Creeden admitted. 

“Then we can go?” 

“Slow down there, slow down,” 
smiled Creeden. Then he added, 
with it seemed some reluctance, 
“Maybe you can — Do you want to 
gor 

Jack, surprised at his own calm- 
ness, said simply, “Yes, we do.’’ 

“I tell you. I may have to give 
that ship a cour.se correction in as 
little as an hour; but that gives me 
time to take you down to see some 
friends of mine. They’re also — 
shall we say, a little discontented 
with the way tilings are going. 

“I guess you realize we don’t like 
the idea of Montiel’s guards finding 
us out. I wouldn’t be telling you 
all this if I wasn’t pretty sure you’d 
want to help us. How about it ?” 

Evlyn assented immediately, but 
Jack pondered. There had been 
anticlimax, both in Creeden’s last 
w'ords and in his tone. Jack per- 

108 



sistecl, “Is there any chance of our 
going to Earth ?” 

“Oh, you can — ’’ Creeden checked 
whatever he had started to say. 
“Maybe. Yes, there’s a chance.” 
He broke the ambiguous silence by 
starting toward the door. Jack and 
Evlyn followed. 

Creeden was slightly out of breath 
when the three of them reached 
Mildred Robertson’s home. She 
lived on the ground level, at the ex- 
treme outer edge of the dome. It 
had been a long walk down that dim, 
metal-sheathed corridor, and no one 
raised under Earth’s terrific surface 
gravity, as Creeden was, can ever 
learn the effortless five-meter stride 
of the native Titanian. Nor was the 
dome’s low air pressure helpful to 
one accustomed to the rich, dense at- 
mosphere of Earth. Jack and Evlyn 
had tried to hold themselves back 
for the sake of the little Earthman, 
but habit is strong. A man on a 
bicycle has a hard time holding him- 
self to a pedestrian’s pace. 

Creeden dropped his hand to the 
small photocell beside the door and 
.shut off the light to it for a second. 
Removing his hand, then replacing 
it several times more, he traced a 
rapid combination. A low buzzing 
told them someone was covering the 
corresponding photocell inside; the 
door swung open. 

“Well, hello, Tony,” said the wo- 
man who stood before them, “come 
in, come in, we’ve been waiting for 
you. Is this — ?” 

Creeden said, “Mildred Robertson 
— Jack Rowell and Evlyn Winters,” 



“I’m glad to know you,” she said, 
almost too heartily, and ushered 
them to seats opposite the one she 
then took, “Glad to know you. Mr. 
Rowell and Miss Winters, this is 
Art Rand.” She indicated a tired- 
looking fat man sitting in the dark- 
ness of a corner. Jack and Evlyn 
.said hello. Art Rand grunted. 

“I think,” said Tony Creeden to 
Mildred Robertson, “we’d better be- 
gin by telling these two something 
about our organization.” Pie 
stopped as she bent uix>n him an 
almost hostile look; when he went 
on, it was that look which he an- 
swered. “We’ve got plenty of time, 
Mildred. Even I don’t have to 
leave for nearly an hour. And you 
remember what we agreed before.” 
Art Rand nodded. 

Creeden began, “As an organiza- 
tion, we’re not much. You’d be sur- 
prised how effective Montiel’s 
guards are. We can’t go out and 
recruit chance acquaintances ; the 
mere attempt could be suicide, you 
know\ We have to be dead sure a 
person’s with us before we can give 
even a reasonably broad hint of the 
organization’s existence. 

“And occasionally one of us gets 
caught. There haVe been two so far. 
That danger’s alw'ays there, and it 
means we have to organize on the 
cell-system, so that each member 
knows only a few of the other mem- 
bers. Once I spent about fifty days 
trying to sound out a friend of mine, 
wondering whether I dared ask him 
to join. In the end I decided not to. 
It turned out, much later, that he 
had already been a member! You 
see, even though I’m one of the lead- 



104 



ASTOUNDING .SCIKNCE-FICTION 



ers 1 still don’t know more than a 
fraction of our men. 

“Yes,” he answered Evlyn’s un- 
spoken comment, “we three, Rand, 
Robertson, and myself, ar» the lead- 
ers. Each of us knows roughly a 
third of the cell captains, and a scat- 
tered few of the members of the 
cells.” 

Evlyn commented vocally on this. 
“Why do you bring us here? Why 
didn’t you just ask us to join cells?” 

Mildred Robertson answered : “In 
the first place, Tony has told us we 
could trust you absolutely. And you 
tw’o are more important than you 
realize — ” She stopped, under the 
combined frowms of Rand and Cree- 
den. 

Jade, mystified though he was by 
the by-play, decided to take a shot in 
the dark. Hoping it was not all wish- 
ful thinking, he finished the sentence 
for her : “Because your organization 
is working for a return to Earth, and 
you want us two to go, soon.” 

Evlyn looked up at him sharply, 
and he could not read her expres- 
sion. Mildred Robertson’s face 
spelled, plainly enough, eager assent • 
but again she was restrained from 
'peaking. 

Creeden said, “You may have no- 
ticed that this room is on the very 
outside of the dome. Mildred got it 
for that very reason. It’s not only 
on the otitside, it’s on the eastern 
face, the side toward the spaceport. 
From that room in back of Mildred, 
there’s a little passage through the 
inner shells, through the insulation, 
to the outer shell. At the end of the 
passage, there is a ring of explosive 

XUK JOrUNEV .\XD THE GOAL 



lithium capsules set into the outer 
shell ; there’s a welding set to repair 
the outer shell should we ever . . . 
er . . . make a breach in it ; and there 
are several spacesuits. Everything’s 
set up for someone to make his es- 
cape from the dome, cross the two 
hundred meters or so to the space- 
])ort, and stow away on an outbound- 
ship. We know how the stowing- 
away can be accomplished; we’ve 
even got hold of some acceleration 
dope.” 

“Am I right, Tgny?-!’ said Jack, 
more diffidently this time. “Do you 
W'ant us to be the first?” 

“We don’t know who is going 
first,” was the answer. “Why should 
you ?” 

Mildred Robertson asked, “Do you 
want to go ?” 

Jack noticed in passing thit this 
was the same apparently superfluous , 
question Creeden had put before, but 
both he and Evlyn answered quickly, 
“Yes.” They exchanged smiles at 
the accident of speaking together: 
amused smiles, but very determined 
smiles. 

“Mildred,” Tony Creeden put in, 
“don’t you want to reconsider? It’s 
only fair to tell them — ” Art Rand 
lifted his hand and Creeden stopped. 

Mildred said to Jack and Evlyn, 
“Then you shall go. The FB-916 will 
leave again for Earth in . . v'hen 
does it leave, Tony?” 

“Between nine and ten hours, de- 
pending on how fast they unload her 
and load her up,” was the laconic 
answer. 

“Ten hours from now you’ll be on 
your way.” 

Amazed happiness made a blurring 

105 




in Jack’s eyes. He looked over at 
Evlyn and again they smiled quietly 
together, and the blurring became a 
little harder to control. In jack’s 
mind formed the old picture, him- 
self, Jack Rowell, surrounded by 
green, the strange green, the living 
green of the far world which was his 
dream’s goal. He didn’t have com- 
plete mastery over the picture ; some- 
times it would close the green around 
him, in walls and ceiling such as he 
knew here. He could abolish the 
ceiling by substituting the starry 
night sky. The sky of Earth’s day 
he could not imagine. 

106 



Oh, Jack did not lose. himself in 
daydreams. He heard and remem- 
bered all Mildred Robertson’s in- 
structions: how to don the space- 
suits; how to leave the dome, cross 
the plain to the spaceport, and enter 
the port ; when inside, how to avoid 
the tunnel which was the usual means 
of reaching the spaceport; where on 
the ship to stow away — she knew all 
the details, even to the stowage of 
the cargoes, — and n^re. He heard 
and understood. 

But always at the back of his mind 
was the imagined sight and sound 
of Earth, and the scoffing thought, 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



“You don't need to keep imagining 
now, Jack. This is i-eal.” - 

They slept in Mildred Robert- 
son’s home, in the room next to the 
passage. 

Jack had a dim dream in which 
Creeden quarreled with Robertson 
and ended by shooting at her the one 
word, “Murderer !” Then he thought 
it might have been more than a 
dream, for he was awake and Evlyn 
was calling, in the voice of a small 
child, “Jack, I’m afraid.’’ She came 
to him and lay weeping softly, her 
head on his chest. 

Much later Jack awoke again, to 
hear a strange voice in the next room 
saying, “ — and he told us there was 
an excessive heat loss from this j^art 
of Level 1 and the guards would have 
to check the insulation. My cell cap- 
tain told me once that if that ever 
happened I should — ” 

“Yes,’’ came Mildred Robertson’s 
voice, sounding suddenly weary, 
“you did right to let me know. M’hen 
will the guards arrive ?’’ 

“They will start checking almost 
immediately. I don’t know how long 
it will take them to get here.’’ 

“All right. Go to Art Rand, Level 
S, Number E626; tell him what 
you’ve told me. Remember not to 
mention it to anyone else except — 
once — to your cell captain. You can 
go now. 

“Good work,’’ she finished. 

Awkwardly, “Thank you’’ ; and 
the smooth swish and thud of the 
door’s closing told that the stranger 
was gone. 

Jack was already fully dressed, and 
now he slipped into the room where 

I'HE JOUKNEY AXD THE GOAL 



Robertson sat, and stood before her. 
She raised her head, slowly. “Vou 
heard that ?’’ 

“Yes.” 

“You know what it means?” 

“Maybe.” 

“It means that if yoji two stay here 
you may be dead today. As far as 
you’re concerned, that’s essentially 
the whole story. You can take your 
choice. You stay, and maybe } ou’ll 
make that ship, maybe 3mu’ll be 
caught. Or you can leave ; there’s 
still time for you to be at work this 
morning as usual, with no one the 
wiser. Miss Winters?” 

Jack followed her eyes; Evlyn 
stood in the doorway behind liim. 
“What — ?” she said sleepily. 

Mildred Robertson repeated to her 
the things Jack had heard. Evlyn 
asked her, “What abotit you ?” 

“Hm-m-m!” she chuckled mirth- 
lessly. “Yes, what about me. They’re 
sure to find our little passage through 
the dome eventually. .Mtogether, it 
may be a week before they kill me. 
Probably less. Possibly 1 might get 
away.” 

Jack realized for the first time how 
hard it would be to hide or to adopt 
a disguise in the isolated and well- 
policed domes of Titan. Once you 
were marked by the guards, vou’d 
have a hard time avoiding them. He 
said nothing. 

“Well, let Art and Tony and me 
worry about that. What are you twp 
going to do ?” 

Jack was startled: he'd forgotten 
the question still needed answering. 
Evlyn frowned briefly. P>ut her vague 
fears of a few hours before seemed 

t07 



to have been dispelled by this con- 
crete threat. She nodded toward the 
passage entrance. “Earth,” she said, 
with more firmness than even Jack 
felt. She looked appealingly at Jack, 
who said, “Of course.” 

Mildred Robertson had been sit- 
ting, chin in hand, like a despondent 
statue. She shook her head, roused 
herself with visible effort, and led 
the way into the back room they had 
just left. Once she was moving, her 
despair seemed to leave her, and she 
resumed her energetic manner of the 
night before. She led the way to the 
wall which was the innermost shell 
of the dome. In the wall you could 
just make out the shape of a small 
door. She worked a catch, the door 
opened, and all three of them ducked 
into the blackness of the passageway. 

Around them were the plastic lay- 
ers of the insulation, unseen but oc- 
casionally brushed against by a hand 
in passing. The narrow doors through 
• which they went were entrance ways 
through the successive metal shells 
which incased almost the whole 
dome. The normal exit was by tun- 
nel, so only at the observatory was 
the smooth regularity of the shells’ 
perfect spheroids broken — at the ob- 
servatory, and here. 

The last door they passed through 
was carefully fitted to serve as an 
air lock port. Jack could tell by the 
sound as it closed behind them. That 
should mean that^the next shell was 
the last, so that this space they were 
now in must serve as the air lock 
when one left the dome into the 
vacuum outside. 

Robertson’s next words confirmed 
his guess. “The next door,” she said, 

108 



“you’d better not open till you’re 
ready to leave. Breathing might be- 
come rather difficult. Here are your 
spacesuits. You might put them on 
now ; you’ll have to stay here' and as 
you’ve noticed it’s rather cold.” That 
very distinct understatement some- 
how gave away the fact that her cas- 
ual tone was assumed. Whatever else 
she was, she was not calm. 

She finished, “If the guards don't 
come, I’ll be in again before you — 
go. But the guards might come. If 
you hear someone inside who fum- 
bles around with the catch on the 
door and doesn’t open it right away 
— then it’s the guards, not me; get 
out.” She was by now quite thor- 
oughly chilled, and thoroughly glad 
to leave. 

Jack 'and Evlyn groped their way 
into spacesuits, closing face plates 
and chest flaps but leaving their air 
masks open. Already invisible to each 
other, they were now partially in- 
audible ; the porous air masks would 
deaden any sound to a whisper. 

They scooped up two little piles of 
insulation, sat down on opposite 
sides of the passage, and waited for 
their eyes to become accustomed to 
the darkness. This, their eyes would 
not do, for here there was no light. 
Jack’s eyes tricked him, scrawled 
meaningless red splotches on the 
blank darkness ; that was all. 

After a while it occurred to them 
to turn on their communicator sets. 

Evlyn said, “I am. afraid. Jack.” 

Jack couldn’t answer; he was si- 
lenced by an abrupt suspicion of her. 
Suspicion that she would not go 
through with this, that she had never 
really shared the dream. 

A.STOUNpiNQ SClENCK KirTION 



She went on, "rm afraid, and last 
night I thought wc shouldn’t try to 
go. But then I saw that staying here 
wouldn’t be — possible. Not any more. 
1? was jjossible before, but not now 
ihat we’ve been offered a chance to 
leave.” 

Anything jack could have said 
would have been inadequate. 

They sat there listening to the 
sound of their own breathing, and 
to a surrounding silence like that of 
outer space. 

“Listen !” said Evlyn, and moinen- 
tarliy cracked her face plate. “Yes, 
1 thought I heard something.” 

Both of them closed air masks and 
started the suits’ air supply, ready to 
leave the dome if necessary. But the 
inner door immediately began to 
move under Jack’s hand, and he 
knew it was Robertson coming. He 
couldn’t see her, nor could he hear 
her with his suit sealed, yet he could 
feel her presence as she entered, and 
another’s. He opened his face plate 
and heard her voice: “It’s about time 
for }mu to go, according to Tony. 
The guards haven’t arrived yet, but 
we don’t know when they may. Oh, 
this is Art Rand with me; I don’t 
know if you can see him.” 

As amatter of fact, Jack had found 
that he could see a little; the new- 
comers had left all the doors open 
behind them, admitting a little light. 
He could sec faintly the stooped, 
vvorried Robertson ; the fat, placid 
Rand ; and a hulking robot that was 
the spacesuited Evlyn. 

They all stood, silent, conscious of 
the situation. Jack started a pitiful 
attempt at formal thanks to Robert- 

THE .TOUKNEY .\ND THE GOAL 



.son and Rand. I'he latter cut him 
short : “Don’t thank us, Rowell. 
Good luck to you.” It was the first 
time Jack had heard his voice, and 
it was the most .sincere and friendly 
voice Jack had ever heard. 

Suddenly Evlyn said, “Miss Rob- 
ertson, if you’re in such danger here, 
why can’t you get away along with 
us? You — ” 

“No; no,” was the quick answer. 

■ “Why not? Both of you — because 
if you’re found here, Mr. Rand, 
you’ll be as badly off as she is. It’s 
the only safe thing for you to do.” 

“It’s not the best — ” She was in- 
terrupted by a low cry from Rand. 
Looking down the passage. Jack 
thought he saw a flickering glow on 
the wall where it took a bend. Then 
against the glow was silhouetted Ihe 
retreating figure of Art Rand. Mil- 
dred Robertson whispered swiftly, 
“You'rb a little early, but better get 
to the ship as fast as you can just 
the same” ; she followed Rand into 
the darkness, and, presumably, into 
the hands of the guards. 

Jack had no time to be puzzled. 
There was the urgent business of 
their own escape. He and Evlyn had 
set off the explosive caps which 
cracked the outer shell before Rob- 
ertson had completely closed the door 
behind her; air pressure pulled the 
door shut with a swift fhlook, and 
popped a section of the outer shell, 
'fhe two spacesuited figures stepped 
through the breach from darknes.s. 
into Saturn-light. 

At first they could see nothing but 
all-pervading radiance, but Jack had 

109 



the presence of mind to lead Evlyn 
along the shell until they were out of 
sight around the curve of the dome. 
After a while they were able to look 
around them. 

It was the first time Jack had ever 
stood on the ground ! It was strange 
to think of walking a floor so uneven 
and so wide in every direction. It 
was strange to think of walking 
freely under the stars. So strange 
was it that part of Jack’s picture of 
Earth seemed realized right there. 

The spaceport was about two hun- 
dred meters away, almost between 
them and Saturn ; were they to move 
some meters to the right they would 
see it silhouetted against the giant 
disk. As it was, they could just make 
out the port’s pillbox-shaped build- 
ings. Projecting upward above the 
largest was the aspiring cylindrical 
bow' of the spaceship. 

They started eastward, watching 
the outline of the ship swell forward 
into the sky as they drew nearer it. 

As soon as he was used to the 
rough footing. Jack looked back over 
his shoulder. The plain looked very 
diflferent when you faced away from 
Saturn ; the irregularities made a 
confusing pattern of streaked light 
and dark. And to see the dome from 
the outside, this dully, smoothly glint- 
ing metal egg that had been their 
universe — this itself was almost 
frightening in its novelty. He spoke 
into his communicator set, telling 
Evlyn to turn around and look. They 
had time to spare for this sight they 
had never seen before nor would 
again. Hadn’t they been told they 
were early for the ship’s take-off? 

So they stopped and turned — and 



saw a spacesuited figure emerge from ' 
the hole by which they had left. 

" Jack, realizing Evlyn and he were 
probably silhouetted against Saturn, 
as seen from the dome, pulled the 
girl down to the ground beside him. 
Calmly, Evlyn said, “Yes, I see. Do 
you think it’s the guards? We've got 
guns, you know.” They both pulled 
their weapons — old rocket pistols, 
firing missiles as large as fists. There 
were twin tubes slanting outward 
and backward from the combustion 
chamber, to carry the initial blast 
away to the sides, so you could hold 
the weapon in front of you like a 
pistol to aim it. 

The guns might not have been used 
since the dome was built, but they 
should work. Jack had leveled his 
sights on the figure at the base of 
the dome when Mildred Robertson’s 
voice sounded coolly in his ears: 
“Don’t shoof.” Of course ! That was 
who it was. And her communicator 
was tuned to theirs. The voice went 
on, “Don’t wait for me. I’ll follow 
vou to the ship if I can make it, but 
don’t—” 

Jack and Evlyn interrupted her al- 
most simultaneously. “Look ! Some- 
one else is coming out of the air 
lock.” In fact, not one, but two, 
bulging spacesuits had appeared. 

Mildred Robertson said calmly, 
“That'll be Art,” and turned around 
in time to get a bullet in the face and 
one in the belly. The first was ex- 
plosive. Her suit deflated instantane- 
ously and settled to the ground with 
her dead flesh inside it. 

Jack fired twice, then jumped to 
his feet and ran. Evlyn was still 



110 



ARTOUNPINO .SCITtXCK-FrCTION 



firing, hut followed quickly. They 
ran, not toward the spaceport, but at 
an angle to the right, so as to get out 
of the direct line from the dome to 
Saturn. When Jack judged they’d 
gone far enough to be safe, he called 
a halt. They cut toward the space- 
port then, at the habitual loping five- 
meter stride that is the walk of the 
Titanian. Once Jack tripped on an 
unseen obstacle, I)ut on Titan a fall 
hardly decreases your speed at all. 

They were cpiite close to their goal 
when suddenly Jack’s shadow leaped 
forth on the ground in front of him. 
A searchlight from behind ! Shoving 
Evlyn sharply to the left, he ducked 
to the right himself, and, when he 
was out of the beam, let the weak 
gravity pull him down to a sprawled- 
uut landing. 

Evlyn wasn’t in sight. Had she es- 
caped the beam before she was hit? 
The lines of faint fire which arrowed 
jjast above him at intervals were, he 
knew, rocket projectiles like those in 
liis own weapon. Some of them ex- 
ploded when they hit the ground far 
beyond, but, of course, he couldn’t 
hear them. 

He tried to locate the searchlight. . 
It wasn’t easy, because there was no 
air out of here to reveal the path of 
the beam; but the light was just 
about where he’d expected, and 
soon he made it out. 

■‘Evlyn?” he said into his mike, 
Iweaking the intolerable silence. 

“Yes?” came the voice in his ears. 

“You O.K.?” 

“Yes. How aliout you ?” 

“O.K. so far. Look, let’s shoot at 
the light.” 

“I sec it. Yes, all right.” 

THK .lOUnXF.Y .\xn THE OO.'iL 



That was all, yet now they were 
fighting side by side instead of being 
isolated on the vast hostile plain. Jack 
fired several times. The guards’ fire at 
him liecame abruptly more accurate, 
and the searchlight began to sw'ing 
to the right. That was O.K. ; if it 
was on him it couldn’t be on Evlyn. 
Then he was directly in its path, and 
its reflector became a blinding little 
sun and a perfect target. Miracu- 
lously, he got it, and slid behind the 
barely adequate cover of a rock be- 
fore the guards’ shots could find hini. 

Evlyn was still shooting. ‘‘Wait, 
Evlyn,” he said. ‘‘Hold your fire 
for half a minute. Without their 
light they’ll forget exactly where you 
are; remember, they’re looking to- 
ward Saturn so they can’t make out 
the features of the ground as well as 
we can. Then we can run for the 
port.” 

‘‘I’m out of ammunition anyway.” 
Jack waited silently, patiently, look- 
ing up at the same stars he’d seen 
and yearned for fifteen years ago. 
The “Sky Room.” 

Evlyn, somewhere out of sight, 
whispered in his ear, “Do 3'ou think 
we’ll make it. Jack.” 

“I don’t know,” he said, attempt- 
ing a matter-of-fact tone. ‘‘Are they 
coming after us ?” 

“I haven’t seen them, but they 
probably are.” 

“Let’s start. We’re pretty close to 
tliE port, we'd just as well run as 
crawl. Let’s go.” 

He sprang erect himself, and ran 
zigzag torvard where the shape of the 
waiting spaceship cut a corner out of 
Saturn', .'\round him apppeared the 

ui 



momentary fiery traces of the small 
rocket-bullets which sped by him un- 
heard. All missed him. Twenty 
meters from a spaceport entrance he 
again stopped and took cover. That 
was the entrance he could safely use 
— unless guards had been sent to 
cover it by those who had seen him 
and Evlyn. He’d have to chance that. 

Best for the two of them to rush 
the entrance together. He called, 
“You O.K.?” 

He waited anxiously. “You O.K., 
Evlyn ?’ 

Silence. He strained to hear the 
sound of her breathing, heard only 
his own. Then he got his answer ; a 
short, strangled cough. 

He looked around him. She had 
been heading for the same entrance 
as he, so she should be nearby. He 
caught a glint from something over 
to the left, faced around. There she 
lay. He crawled to her. 

Behind her face plate, above the 
monstrously machinelike body of her 
spacesuit, her small face seemed dis- 
embodied, ethereal in the starlight. 
But the eyes that looked from the 
face — 

Jack squatted beside her. “Where 
are you hit ?’’ 

The eyes moved downward, as if 
pointing. Jack saw that her right 
hand was pressed to her side. Prob- 
ably she was stopping the hole in her 
spacesuit. 

“Down there on 3'our side?” 

Almost inaudibly, “Yes.” 

Jack watched in anguish, not trust- 
ing himself to speak further. What 
could he do? There was no haven 
for her back there in the dome. 
They’d have to go ahead. He looked 



over his shoulder at where the dis- 
tant dome occulted stars. Somewhere 
between there and here guards might 
be coming toward them. He'd almost 
forgotten about the guards. 

“We’ve got to try to make the 
ship,” he said unsteadil}’. ‘Tve got 
to carry you.” 

She seemed to be nedding. He 
bent to lift her, but set her down 
again in horror. It must have been 
pain that had made her writhe so 
suddenly and so terribly, yet she had 
made no sound. Either that or her 
communicator’s mike wasn’t work- 
ing. When she’d spoken, before, he’d 
scarcely heard it. 

He looked again at her face as she 
lay there. She was smiling ! 

Then she coughed terribly, and her 
face disappeared. The face plate was 
covered with blood. Jack’s brain xeg- 
istered the fact that Evlyn’s mike 
wasn’t working, for he hadn’t heard 
the cough; and the fact that Evlyn 
was dying. Register the facts was 
all he could do. He felt burned out 
inside. 

He registered the fact that Evlyn’s 
spacesuit was deflating. Deduction : 
her hand was not on the hole. There- 
fore : he must stop the leak. Secpnd 
deduction: she was unconscious. 
Therefore : he could carry her with- 
out her feeling pain. 

Blinded and mad, reckless of the 
fire of the guards behind him, gin- 
gerly carrying the inert bundle that 
was a wounded human being, Jack 
Rowell raced to the spaceport en- 
trance. After that his brain automat- 
ically followed the directions given it 
so long before: down this corridor, 
through this hatch — He didn’t think. 



112 



ASTOUNDING S C I E N C U - T 1 0 T I O N 



When he was safely *in the pre- 
scribed compartment of the ship, he 
administered the acceleration dope to 
himself and Evlyn. If the guards 
found them before the ship took off, 
he’d rather be under the dope than 
awake. He wouldn’t want to know 
about it just then. 

“I finally got him on the visor,” 
Jack said wearily, the Earth slang 
.sounding strange on his lips. “The 
Secretary himself. I tried to make 
him listen, but no soap.” 

“What did he say?” Evlyn was 
loo weak to lift her head from the 
pillows. 

“Just what his assistants said. He 
seemed surprised Ivshould ask .him 



♦ 

about it. I’d try to argue with him 
and he’d repeat what he said before, 
as if he thought I hadn’t understood. 
It was as good a way of stalling me 
off as any, I suppose.” He made a 
hopeless gesture. There was no reply 
from Evlyn. 

We must make a strange picture, 
‘ Jack thought for the hundredth time 
since their arrival on Earth. Shock- 
ingly tall, head and shoulders above 
everyone else — when we stand up- 
right. Evelyn lying, cramped, in the 
hospital’s longest bed, I leaning back 
in a wheelchair that had to be spe- 
cially made. Freaks. So the Secre- 
tary must have thought this after- 
noon; That bean-pole yokel, that 
freak. 




XHE JOURNEY AND THE GOAL 



113 



Aloud, “No, he wouldn’t even 3is 
cuss it with me. Said Titan’s produce 
wasn’t useful any more, so Earth 
woftidn’t use it any more. Didn’t 
know where the Titanians could go ; 
all the other colonial planets have 
been abandoned except Mars and 
Venus. And he didn’t care,” 

“Where can they go. Jack ? Where 
can zve go ?” 

He answered the first question. 
“They can’t come here, that’s cer- 
tain.”' 

Evlyn shuddered assent. 

“Mars, maybe.” Jack pulled him- 
self up from the chair with great ef- 
fort, leaned against its back to catch 
his breath. Consciously imitating the 
Earthmen’s short, awkward steps, he 
stumped across the room to the win- 
dow, and looked out, his eyes slitted 
against the piercing fire of the May 
sunshine, the agonizing glare of sun 
on Arizona sand. He stood there, 
torturing himself by looking as di- 
rectly as he was able at the violent 
colors of hell. 

“Do you think Tony knew?” he 
asked meditatively. 

“He must have suspected better 
than anyone,” said Evlyn slowly. 
"After all, he lived here; he knew 
how different Titan was.” 

“But not how different w'e were.” 
“No . . . Mildred Robertson sus- 
pected, and Art Rand.” 

“They knew most of it,” said Jack, 
feeling no resentment against those 
w'ho had damned him without warn- 
ing, had withheld the warning Tony 
Creeden had wanted to give. The 
only concession they’d made to Tony 
had been to wait for Evlyn and Jack 
to volunteer, rather than asking 

114 



them. Though Jack understood ah 
this now, there was no resentment at 
all. 

“They knew most of it,” he re- 
peated. “What was there to know? 
The gravity — they knew about that. 
They knew what we should have 
thought about ourselves : a child that 
grows up in a low gravity has long, 
thin bones ; not a matter of heredity 
at all, but purely environment. I 
don’t think they did know that that 
child’s bones are also brittle, very 
brittle, and his muscles very weak. 

“They didn’t know,” he went on 
savagely, still torturing himself, 
“that the first step I took on the new 
planet I’d fall and break my arm in 
too ;nany places- to count.’~ 

“No, they didn’t, or they wouldn’t 
have let us go,” Evlyn said gently. 
“They wanted to find out. They 
wanted to send guinea pigs, and we 
were good choices.” 

“They’ll find out all right, soon, 
without our telling them — when they 
have to abandon Titan and come here 
themselves.” 

“They won’t,” she reminded him. 
“No ; no. Not Robertson and Rand. 
The rest — some of the things, they 
couldn’t have known. The air. 
Higher air pressure here, more oxy- 
gen, but also more nitrogen. They 
couldn’t have guessed how bad that 
would be. It’s just like the mental 
'dullness that gets underwater divers 
on Earth when the pressure goes up 
too high. I don’t spend twenty hours 
a day sleeping any more, but I feel 
slow and stupid. And I am. I can’t 
remember. I can’t think.” 

“I know.” There was subdued 
horror in her voice. 

ASTOCXDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



“That’s the worst of it. Then there 
are the infections — I’ve been rela- 
tively well for five days now, Evlyn, 
but it won’t be long before I’ve got 
another of those diseases that Earth 
doctors never knew about. Children 
here develop lots of immunities early 
and painlessly, but the dome w'e were 
in was so nearly sterile we never 
needed those immunities ; the minute 
we breathed this air everything hit 
us at once. At least that’s what the 
doc told me. Your doctor might have 
a different explanation. 

“And the light here. Of course 
it’s just because our irises are almost 
atrophied, so our pupils can’t con- 
tract to shut out enough of the 
brightness. Knowing the explanation 
doesn’t help.” He realized that while 
he’d been talking he’d let his lids 
drop. Brutally, he forced his eyes 
open, forced them to follow moving 
objects outside : .a plane on the hori- 
zon, a copter circling above the hos- 
pital. The blue sky shimmered, the 
white clouds danced. Pain spilled 
forth inside him, stimulating his 
dulled brain. 

Evlyn was speaking behind him. 
“Why are you saying all this, Jack ?” 
He shrugged foolishly. “Maybe 
because I got myself all ready to say 
it to the Secretary this afternoon and 
then got stalled before I got it off 
my chest. I don’t think so, though. 
I think I’m saying sit to see if I can 
diange my own nrind.” 

“Change your mind ?” 

“That’s right. And I can’t change 
it. I still feel the same. I’m still 
glad we’re here.” He made his strug- 
gling way back to the wheelchair and 

THE 



sank again into its supporting cush- 
ions. “No, not glad we’re here. Not 
that exactly. 

“Evlyn, when we were waiting on 
the plane outside the spaceport, just 
before you were . . . just before we 
got away ... I thought for a while 
it was all pointleis, our going out 
and taking the chances we took. It 
wasn’t. It’s not pointless, if the 
dream’s big enough. And Earth was, 
then.” 

“Even if I had died ?” She seemed 
to ask purely from curiosity. 

“Even if one of us had died. On 
the ship, when each time I went to 
sleep I wondered if you’d be alive 
when I awoke. Even then it was 
worth it to me — ” 

“And to me. And after we got 
here, even though it was so different 
from w'hat we expected. We had to 
come. Jack.” 

“That’s it, Evlyn, that’s it. I think 
you always saw this, but I’m just 
seeing it now: The dream is big 
enough, it still is, it was worth it to 
come here, it’s worth it now. But 
what was it we wanted? Not any 
one planet. We thought it was that, 
but it was simply crossing space. All 
along, the journey was more impor- 
tant than the goal. 

“And if the days we spent in the 
spaceship were torture, and the days 
since then, well, that’s unimportant 
too. Just crossing space — ” 

“The sky’s still there at night,” 
murmured Evlyn. 

“It’s still there. It doesn’t matter 
. that Earth isn’t in it any more. Alpha 
Centauri is. And Sirius. And the 
dream.” 

END. 



THE JOURNEY AND THE GOAL 



lie 




BRASS TACKS 



Edwards' little gag article seems to 
have been one of the most popular 
in a long time. 

Dear Editor; 

1 read with considerable interest 
the article "Meihem in ce Klasrum,” 
by Dolton Edwards, which, although 
obviously written with tongue in 
cheek, made more sense than was 
at first reading apparent. 

However, I should like to point 
out two inconsistencies in Mr. Ed- 
wards’ last jjaragraph, which I am 
sure that he overlooked. First, the 
matter of the two sounds for “g.” 
-\ccording to his own suggestions, 
only one sound should be repre- 
sented by one letter. I would sug- 
ge.st retaining the present character 
■‘g” to represent the hard sound, and 
using the letter “j” for the soft 
sound. Thus, “knowledge” would 
be written as “nolej.” Also, Mr. 
Edwards violated his own rule by 
using the character “u” as two dif- 
ferent sounds, in “language” and in 
“tu.” I would use the letter “w” 
in the former instance, as “lan- 
gwaj.” — Jack D. Rodgers, 225 27th 
Street, San Bernardino, Calif. 

n« 



There must be some fancy control 

problems! 

Dear Mr. Campbell ; 

That was a pretty interesting 
letter of Mr. Shelton’s that you 
published. A few months back 
there was a story published on the 
V-2 — (which the Germans inciden- 
tally called the A-4) — and among 
the pictures was one of the track 
in the sky corresponding to Mr. 
Shelton’s description. The caption 
said the crookedness was caused 
by winds. I have seen only one 
other i^hotograph and there the 
track was nearly straight. 

I happen to have access to cer- 
tain reports concerning the construc- 
tion and operation of the V-2. 
They are marked secret so I can’t 
say what is in them. I can say, 
however, that I found nothing in 
them that would explain the crooked 
track. However,- 1 am a chemist 
and not an engineer so perhaps I 
missed something. 

I have a theory to explain the ir- 
regularity, but I’m not at all sure 
that it is correct. The control sys- 
tem has a rapid response to short 



ASTOU.NDING SCIBXCE-FICTION 




j)criod oscillations of the rocket so 
that it ma\’ be that once an oscil- 
lation is set up, the controls either 
overcompensate or the rocket is car- 
ried past the neutral point by its 
own inertia. This causes the con- 
trol gyros to move the vanes in the 
jet stream and the tabs at the outer 
corners of the tail so as to make 
the rocket back to the neutral point 
and the cycle is repeated again and 
again, at least until the motor ceases 
to function. After it is stopped no 
further control is exerted. 

I notice that the last half of the 
trail in the picture is relatively 
straight. Due to increasing Mach 
number, the effectiveness of the 
vanes drops to about half its former 
value at a certain velocity of the 
rocket. This would seem to indicate 
that the ragged trail is due in part 
at least to overcompensation of the 
control surfaces. Once their effec- 
tiveness is reduced, they compensate 
for irregularities in flight more cor- 
rectly and the track becomes 
straight. 

I don’t agree that dwi-cesium and 
dwi-iodine would react violently. 
Synthetic eka-iodine is already well 
on the metallic side' so that dwi- 
iodine would be definitely a metal. 
The only metals I know of that 
get violent when they meet are 
mercury and the alkali metals. I 
suspect a pound or so of dwi-cesium 
could get pretty violent all by it- 
self. We have: Li — relatively stable 
in air; Na — ozidizes in air, decom- 
poses water rather quietly; K — in- 
flames in water ; Cs — inflames in air. 
By the time you get dwi-cesium you 
should have something that will ex- 

BRASS TACKS 



plode in air. — John Buddhue. 99 
South Raymond Avenue, Pasadena 
2, California, 



Rate away — everybody's ivelcome! 
Dear Sir : 

May I try a hand at this rating 
game? 

1. “Command.” The resolution 
was a bit simple, and it seems to me 
spaceships have carried their own 
gardens before, but the writing held 
together nicely, and there seemed to 
be no harsh notes in the entire story. 

2. “Bad Patch.” A dangerous 
idea for a story, but for me it came 
off, partially because I was looking 
for December 7, 1941 to change the 
ideas of Lloral. And probably his 
idea was right — the machine makes 
the difference. 

3. “Tomorrow And Tomorrow.” 
This would have been better if the 
introduction had not been so long, 
and there was some confusion. And 
for a society that was against new 
ideas or research, there seemed to be 
plenty of renegades. 

4. “Housing Shortage.” In such 
a setup, would breaking windows let 
one enter into the right house, when 
only the door was so designed ? My 
sympathy was won because the in- 
ventor couldn’t think of anything 
better to do with his idea than earn 
more rent. 

5. “Sinecure.” With machines as 
complicated as those, and as numer- 
ous, there would have been techni- 
cians around, or at least repairmen, 
not just tlie three men. But the plot 
twist was nice. 

6. “The Undamned.” This story 

m 



was talked to death. Conver.sation is 
all right, but not in the face of 
atomic bombs with difficult fuses. 
Besides, if I could make a detonator 
that would go off to certain thought 
patterns, I could make one that 
would respond to the presence of a 
pretty gray-eyed brunette at ranges 
up to five miles — and not be taken in 
by any “Gay Deceivers.” 

7. “Time to Die.” I just couldn’t 
get interested, maybe because the 
illustration foretold the ending. — 
Alderson Fry, 4055 9th, N.E., 
Seattle 5, Washington. 



The art department is really looking 
up ! Cartier — Orban — Schneeman 
— Rogers — all back! 

Dear Mr. Campbell : 

Just got my January ASF and had 
to dash off a note immediately to 
congratulate you on getting Cartier 
back. His three pics were a welcome 
.sight after these last few dismal 
years of poor art in the magazine. 
It’s also good to see Orban back. 

I.et’s give Cartier the entire mag 
to illustrate, or nearly all with a pos- 
sible few pix by Orban. 

Is it true that we fans who have 
waited so long are going to get Un- 
knou'u back at last ? — Richard A. 
Frank, 342 Susquehanna Street, 
Williamsport 15, Pennsylvania. 



.'llejandro will be back— and with a 
coi’cr style totally different from 
anything you’ve seen! 

Dear Mr. Campbell : 

This letter is being written with 



the express purpose of commenting 
on a few points in the DECEMBER 
issue of ASF. 

First and foremost I would like to 
give three rousing cheers for the 
change of cover artists. Not only is 
Timmins off the cover but Alejandro 
seems to have a style of great prom- 
ise. There is a weird atmo.sphere 
about the “Metaniorphosite’-’ that 
makes your scalp crawl. Give the 
guy some more covers to do instead 
of reverting back to Timmins as I 
see you have on the next cover. 

Next we come to the feature story, 
and an excellent story it is, too. In 
fact, it ristis above the usual run of 
feature stories like “World Of A” 
does in comparison to “Slaves of the 
Lamp.” And the ending was cer- 
tainly unexpected in its dramatic in- 
tensity. But why go on — surely the 
voters will bear me out. 

And for my selections as to first, 
second, and third place . . . 

1. “ Metaniorphosite,” by Eric 
Frank Russell. 

2. “For the Public,” by Bernard 
I. Kahn. For a new author he’s tops ! 

3. “Hand of the Gods,” by A. E. 
van Vogt. Clane’s quite a guy. 

4. “Time Enough,” by Lewis 
Padgett. Padgett could have done 
much better. 

5. “The Impossible Pirate,” by 
George O. Smith. Maybe it’s me, 
maybe it’s purely personal prefer- 
ence but G. O. Smith seems strictly 
a last-place author — not once but 
always. — Joseph B. Baker, 



U8 



A.STODNDIXG SCIEXCE-FIOTION 




E FOR EFFORT 



A new author brings a new idea of how to use a 
time-viewing . machine. But there's one thing wrong 
with time-viexeers ; they may work perfectly techni- 
cally, but in human society they're deadly weayons! 

• 

Illustrated by Tiedeman 



BY T. L. SHERRED 

The captain was met at the airport 
by a staff car. Long and fast it sped. 
In a narrow, silent room the general 
sat, ramrod-backed, tense. The major 
waited al the foot of the gleaming 
steps .shining frostily in the night air. 
Tires screamed to a stop and to- 
gether the captain and the major 
raced up the steps. No words of 
greeting were spoken. The general 
stood quickly, hand outstretched. 
The captain ripped open a dispatch 
case and handed over a thick bundle 
of papers. The general flipped them 
over eagerly and spat a sentence at 
the major. The major disappeared 
and his harsh voice rang curtly down 
the outside hall. The man with 
glasses came in and the general 
handed him the papers. With jerky 
fingers the man with glasses sorted 

E FOR EFFORT 



them out. With a wave from the 
general the captain left, a proud 
smile on his weary young face. The 
general tapped his fingertips on the 
black glossy surface of the table. 
The man with glasses pushed aside 
crinkled maps, and began, to read 
aloud. 

Dear Joe: 

I started this just to kill time, because 
I got tired of just looking out the win- 
dow. But when I got almost to the end 
I began to catch the trend of what’s go- 
ing on. You’re the only one I know that 
can come through for me, and when you 
finish this you’ll know why you must. 

I don’t know who will get this to you. 
Whoever it is won’t want you to identify 
a face late Remember that, and please. 
Joe — hurry! 

Ed 

It all started because I’m lazy. By 
the time I’d shaken oft the sandman 
and checked out of the hotel every 

u» 




seat in the bus was full. 1 stuck my 
bag in a dime locker and went out 
to kill the hour I had until the next 
bus left. You know the bus termi- 
nal ; right across from the Book- 
Cadi llac and the Statler, on Wash- 
ington Boulevard near Michigan 
.Avenue. Michigan Avenue. Like 
Main in Los Angeles, or maybe Six- 
ty-third in its present state of decay 
in Chicago, where I was going. 
Cheap movies, pawnshops ancl bars 
by the dozens, a penny arcade or 
two, restaurants that feature ham- 
burg steak, bread and butter and cof- 
fee for forty cents. Before the War, 
a quarter. 

I like pawnshops. I like camera^, 
I like tools, I like to look in windows 
crammed with everything from elec- 
tric razors to sets of sgcket wrenches 
to upper plates. So, with an hour to 
spare, I walked out Michigan to 
.Sixth and back on the other side of 
the street. There are a lot of Chi- 
nese and Mexicans around that part 
of town, the Chinese running the 
restaurants and the Mexicans eating 
Southern Home Cooking. Between 
Fourth and Fifth 1 stopped to stare 
at what passed for a movie. Store 
windows painted black, amateurish 
signs extolling in Spanish “Detroit 
premiere . . . cast of thousands . . . 
this week only . . . ten cents — ” The 
few 8x10 glossy stills pasted on the 
windows were poor blowups, spotty 
and wrinkled ; pictures of mailed 
cavalry and what looked like a good 
sized battle. All for ten cents. Right 
down my alley. 

Maybe it’s lucky that history was 
my major in school. Luck it must 
have been, certainly not cleverness. 

120 



that made me pay a dime for a seal 
in an undertaker’s rickety folding 
chair imbedded solidly — although the 
only other customci;^ were a half- 
dozen Sons of the Order of Tortilla — 
in a cast of second-hand garlic. I sat 
near the door. A couple of hundred 
watt bulbs dangling naked from the 
ceiling gave enough light for me to 
look around. In front of me, in the 
rear of the store, was the screen, 
wh.at looked like a white-painted 
sheet of beaverboard, and when over 
my shoulder I saw the battered six- 
teen millimeter projector I began to 
think that even a dime was no bar- 
gain. .Still, I had forty minutes to 
wait. 

Everyone was smoking. I lit a 
cigarette and the discouraged Mexi- 
can who had taken my dime locked 
the door and turned off the lights, 
after giving me a long, questioning 
look. I’d paid my dime, so I looked 
right back. In a minute the old pro- 
jector started clattering. No film 
credits, no producer’s name, no di- 
rector, just a tentative flicker before 
a closeup of a be whiskered mug la- 
beled Cortez. Then a painted and 
feathered Indian with the title of 
Guateinotzin, successor to Monte- 
zuma ; an aerial shot of a beautiful 
job of model-building tagged Ciudad 
de Mejico, 1521. Shots of old muz- 
zle-loaded artillery banging away, 
great walls spurting stone splinters 
under direct fire, skinny Indians dy- 
in,g violently with the customary gy- 
rations, smoke and haze and blood. 
The photography sat me right up 
straight. It had none of the scratches 
and erratic cuts that characterize an 
old print, none of the fuzziness, none 

.\ ,s T o r : .\ n I N G s o i E x c i : - F r c t i o n 



of the usual mugging at the camera 
by the handsome hero. There wasn’t 
any handsome hero. Did you ever 
see one of these French pictures, or 
a Russian, and comment on the real- 
ity and depth brought out by work- 
ing on a small budget that can’t 
afford famed actors ? This, what 
there was of it, was as good, or 
better. 

It wasn’t until the picture ended 
with a pan shot of a dreary desola- 
tion that I began to add two and 
two. You can’t, for pennies, really 
have a cast of thousand, or sets 
big enough to fill Central Park. A 
mock-up, even, of a thirty-foot fall 
costs enough to irritate the auditors, 
and there had been a lot of wall. 
That didn’t fit with the bad editing 
and lack of sound track, not unless 
the picture had been made in the old 
silent days. And 1 knew it hadn’t 
by the color tones you get with pan 
film. It looked like a well-rehearsed 
and badly-planned newsreel. 

The Mexicans were easing out and 
I followed them to where the dis- 
couraged one was rewinding the reel. 
I asked him where he got the print. 

“I haven’t heard of any epics from 
the press agents lately, and it looks 
like a fairly recent print.” 

He agreed that it was recent, and 
added that he’d made it himself. I 
was polite to that, and he saw that I 
didn’t believe him and straightened 
up from the projector. 

“You don’t believe that, do you?” 
I said that I certainly did, and I had 
to catch a bus. “Would you mind 
telling me why, exactly why?” I 
said that the bus — “I mean it. I’d 



appreciate it if you’d tell me just 
what’s wrong with it.” 

“There’s nothing wrong with it,” 
I told him. He waited for me to go 
on. “W'’ell, for one thing, pictures 
like that aren’t made for the sixteen 
millimeter trade. Y'ou’ve got a re- 
duction from a thirty-five millimeter 
master,” and I gave him a few of 
the other reasons that separate home 
movies from Hollywood. When I 
finished he smoked quietly for a 
minute. 

“I see.” He took the reel off the 
projector spindle and clo.sed the case. 
“I have beer in the back.” I agreed 
beer sounded good, but the bus — 
well, just one. From in back of the 
beaverboard screen he brought paper 
cups and a Jumbo bottle. With a 
whimsical “Business suspended” he 
closed the open door and opened the 
bottle with an opener screwed on the 
wall. The store had lik«ly been a 
grocery or restaurant. There were 
plenty of chairs. Two we shoved 
around and relaxed companionably. 
The beer was warm. 

“You know something about this 
line,” tentatively. 

I took it as a question and laughed. 
“Not too much. Flerc’s mud,” and 
we drank. “Used to drive a truck 
for the Film Exchange.” He was 
amused at that. 

“Stranger in town?” 

“Yes and no. Mostly yes. Sinus 
trouble chased me out and relatives 
bring me back. Not any more, 
though ; my father’s funeral was last 
week.” He said that was too bad, 
and I said it wasn’t. “He had sinus, 
too.” That was a joke, and he re- 



E FOR EFFORT 



121 



filled the cups. We talked awhile 
about Detroit climate. 

Finally he said, rather specula- 
tively, “IDidn’t I see you around here 
last night? Just about eight.” He 
got up and went after more beer. 

I called after him. “No more beer 
for me.” He brought a bottle any- 
way, and I looked at my watch. 
“Well, just one.” 

“Was it you?” 

“Was it me what?” I held out 
my paper cup. 

"Weren’t you around here — ” 

I wijxid foam off my mustache, 
"l.ast night? No, but I wish I had. 
I’d have, caught my bus. No, I was 
in the Motor Bar last night at eight. 
And I was still there at midnight.” 

He chewed his lip thoughtfully. 
“The !Motor Bar. Ju.st down the 
street ?” and I nodded. “The Motor 
Bar. Hm-m-m.^’ I looked at him. 
“Would you like . . . sure, you 
would.” Before I could figure out 
what he was talking about he went 
to the back and from behind the 
beaverboard screen rolled out a big 
radio - phomjgraph and another 
Jumbo bottle. I held the bottle 
against the light. Still half full. I 
looked at my watch. He rolled the 
radio against the wall and lifted the 
lid to get at the dials. 

“Reach behind you, will you? The 
switcli on the wall.” I could reach 
the switcli without getting up, and I 
did. The lights went out. I hadn’t 
expected that, and I groped at arm’s 
length. Then the lights came on 
again, and I turned back, relieved. 
But the lights weren’t on; I was 
looking at the street ! 

Now, all this happened while I 

] 1>2 



was dripping beer and trying to keep 
my balance on a tottering chair — the 
street moved, I didn’t and it was day 
and it was night and I was in front 
of the Book-Cadillac and I was go- 
ing into the Motor Bar and I was 
watching myself order a beer and 1 
knew I was wide awake and not 
dreaming. In a panic I scrabbled 
off the floor, shedding chairs and 
beer like an umbrella while I ripped 
my nails feeling frantically for that 
light switch. By the time I found 
it — and all the while I was watching 
myself pound the bar for the bar- 
keep — I was really in fine fettle, just 
about ready to collajise. Out of thin 
air right into a nightmare. At last 
I found the switch. 

The Mexican was looking at me 
with the queerest expression I’ve 
ever seen, like he’d baited a mouse- 
trap and caught a frog. Me? I sup- 
pose I looked like I’d seen the devil 
himself. Maybe I had. The beer 
was all over the floor and I barely 
made it to the nearest chair. 

“What,” I managed to get out, 
“what was that?” 

The lid of the radio went down. 
“I felt like that too, tlic first time. 
I’d forgotten.” 

My fingers were too shaky to get 
out a cigarette, and I rippecl off the 
top of the package. “1 said, what 
was that ?” 

He sat down. “That w^as you, in 
the Motor Bar, at eight last night.” 
I must have looked blank as he 
handed me another paper cup. Auto- 
matically I held it out to be refilled. 

“Look here — ” I started. 

“I suppose it is a shock. I’d for- 
gotten what I felt like the first time 



A STOUXniXO SrTKXOK-FIOTrOX 



I ... I don’t care much any more. 
Tomorrow I’m going out to Phillips 
Radio.” That made no sense to me, 
and I said so. He went an. 

“I’m licked. I’m flat broke. I 
don’t give a care any more. I’ll set- 
tle for cash and live off the royal- 
ties.” The story came out, slowly at 
first, then faster until he was pacing 
the floor. I guess he was tired of 
having no one to talk to. 

His name was Miguel Jose Zapata 
Laviada. I told him mine; Lefko. 
Ed Lefko. He was the son of sugar 
beet workers who had emigrated 
from Mexico somewhere in the 
Twenties. They were sensible enough 
not to quibble when their oldest son 
left the back - breaking Michigan 
fields to seize the chance provided by 
a NYA scholarship. When the 
scholarship ran out, he’d worked in 
garages, driven trucks, clerked in 
stores, and sold brushes door-to- 
door to exist and learn. The Army 
cut short his education with the First 
Draft to make him a radar techni- 
cian, the Army had given him an 
honorable discharge and an idea so 
nebulous as to be almost merely a 
hunch. Jobs were plentiful then, 
and it wasn’t too hard to end up ■ 
with enough money to rent a trailer 
and fill it with Army surplus radio 
and radar equipment. One year ago 
he’d finished what he’d started, fin- 
ished underfed, underweight, and 
overexcited. But successful, because • 
he had it. 

“It” he installed in a radio cabi- 
net, both for ease in handling and 
for camouflage. For reasons that 
will become apparent, he didn’t dare 



apply for a patent. I looked “it” 
over pretty carefully. Where the 
phonograph turntable and radio con- 
trols had been were vernier dials ga- 
lore. One big one was numbered 1 
to 24, a couple were numbered 1 to 
60, and there were a dozen or so 
numbered 1 to 25, plus two or three 
with no numbers at all. Closest of 
all it resembled one of these fancy 
radio or motor testers found in a 
super super-service station. That 
was all, except that there was a sheet 
of heavy plywood hiding whatever 
was installed in place of the radio 
chassis and speaker. A perfectly in- 
nocent cache for — 

Daydreams are swell, I suppose 
we’ve all had our share of mental 
wealth or fame or travel or fantasy. 
But to sit in a chair and drink warm 
beer and realize that the dream of 
ages isn’t a dream any more, to feel 
like a god, to know that just by turn- 
ing a few dials you can see and watch 
anything, anybody, anywhere, that 
has ever happened — it still bothers 
me once in a while. 

I know this much, that it’s high 
frequency stuff. And there’s a lot 
of mercury and copper and wiring 
of metals cheap and easy to find, 
but what goes where, or how, least 
of all, why, is out of my line. Light 
has mass and energy, and that mass 
always loses part of itself and can be 
translated back to electricity, or 
something. Mike Laviada himself 
says that what he stumbled on and 
developed was nothing new, that 
long before the war it had been 
observed many times by men like 
Compton and Michelson and Pfeif- 
fer, who di.scarded it as a useless 



E FOR EFFORT 



123 



laboratory effect. And, ot course, 
that was before atomic research took 
jrrecedence over everything. 

When the first shock wore off — 
and Mike had to give me another 
demonstration — I must have made 
tjuite a sight. Mike tells me I 
couldn’t sit down. I’d pop up and 
• gallop up and down the floor of that 
ancient store kicking chairsvout of 
my way or stumbling over them, all 
the time gobbling out words and dis- 
connected sentences faster than my 
tongue could trip. Finally it filtered 
through that he was laughing at me. 
I didn’t see where it was any laugh- 
ing matter, and I prodded him. He 
began to get angry. 

“I know what I have,” he snapped. 
“I’m not the biggest fool in the 
world, as you seem to think. Here, 
watch this,” and he went back to 
the radio. “Turn out the light.” I 
did, and tliere I was watching my- 
self at the Motor Bar again, a lot 
happier this time. “Watch this.” 

The bar backed away. Out in the 
street, two blocks down to the City 
Hall. Up the steps to the Council 
Room. No one the're. Then Coun- 
cil was in session, then they were 
gone again. Not a picture, not a 
projection of a lantern slide, but a 
slice of life about twelve feet square. 
If we were close, the field of view 
was narrow. If we were further 
away, the background was just as 
much in foctis as the foreground. 
The images, if you want to call them 
images, were just as real, just as life- 
like as looking in the doorway of a 
room. Real they were, three-dimen- 
sional, stopped by only the back wall 

I '-’4 



or the distance in the background. 
Mike was talking as he spun the 
dials, but I was too engrossed to pay 
much attention. 

I yelped and grabbed and closed 
my eyes as you would if you were 
looking straight down with nothing 
between you and the ground except 
a lot of smoke and a few clouds. I 
winked my eyes open almost at the 
ends of what must have been a long 
racing vertical dive, and there I was, 
looking at the street again. 

“Go any place up to the Heaviside 
Layer, go down as deep as any hole, 
anywhere, any time.” A blur, and 
the street changed into a glade of 
spar.se pines. “Buried treasure. Sure. 
Find it, with what ?” The trees dis- 
appeared, and I reached back for the 
light switch as he dropped the lid of 
the radio and sat down. 

“How are you going to make any 
money when you haven’t got it to 
start?” No answer to that from me. 
“I ran an ad in the paper offering 
to recover lost articles ; my first cus- 
tomer was the Law wanting to see 
my private detective’s license. I’ve 
seen every big speculator in the 
country sit in his office buying and 
selling and making plans ; what do 
3’^ou think would happen if I tried to 
peddle advance market information? 
I’ve watched the stock market get 
shoved up and down while I had 
barely the money to buy the paper 
that told me about it. I watched a 
bunch of Peruvian Indians bury the 
second ransom of Atuahalpa; I 
haven’t the fare to get to Peru, or 
the money to buy the tools to dig.” 
He got up and brought two more 



A.STOUNPINO .sCIKX(’E-FK'TIOX 



lx>ttles. He went on. By tliat time- 
I was getting a few ideas. 

“I’ve w'atched scribes indite the 
books that burnt at Alexandria ; who 
would buy, or who would believe 
me, if I copied one? What would 
happen if I went over to the Library 
and told them to rewrite their histo- 
ries? How many would fight to tie 
a rope around my neck if they knew 
I’d watched them steal and murder 
.and take a bath? What sort of a 
padded cell would I get if I showed 
up with a photograph of Washing- 
ton, or Caesar? Or Christ?’’ 

I agreed that it was all probably 
true, but — 

“Why do you think I’m here now ? 
You saw the picture I showed for a 
dime. A dime’s worth, and that’s 
all, because I didn’t have the money 
to buy film or to make the picture as 
I knew I should.’’ His tongue be- 
gan to get tangled. He was excited. 
“I’m doing this because I haven’t the 
money to get the things I need to 
get the money I’ll need — ’’ He was 
so disgusted he booted a chair half- 
way across the r' om. It was easy 
to see that if I had been around a 
little later, Phillips Radio would 
have profited. Maybe I’d have been 
better off, too. 

Now, although always I’ve been 
told that I’d never be worth a hoot, 
no one has ever accused me of being 
slow for a dollar. Especially an easy 
one. I saw money in front of me, 
easy money, the easiest and the 
quickest in the world. I saw, for a 
minute, so far in the future with me 
on top of the heap, that my head 
reeled and it was hard to breathe. 

“Mike,” I said, “let’s finish that 



beer and go where we can get some 
more, and maybe something to eat. 
We’ve got a lot of talking to do. So 
we did. 

Beer is a mighty fine lubricant ; 1 
have always been a pretty smooth 
talker, and by the time we left the 
gin mill I had a pretty good idea of 
just what Mike had on his mind. 
By the time we’d shacked up for 
the night behind that beaverboard 
screen in the store, we were full- 
fledged partners. I don’t recall our 
even shaking hands on the deal, but 
that partnership still holds good. 
Mike is ace high with me, and I 
guess it’s the other way around, too. 
That was six years ago ; it only took 
me a year or so to discard some of 
the corners I used to cut. 

Seven days after that, on a 
Tuesday, I was riding a bus to 
Grosse Pointe with a full briefcase. 
Two days after that I was riding 
back from Grosse Pointe in a shiny 
taxi, with an empty briefcase and 
a pocketful of folding money. It 
was easy. 

“Mr. Jones — or Smith — or 
Brown — I’m with Aristocrat Stu- 
dios, Personal and Candid Portraits. 
We thought you might like this 
picture of you and ... no, this is 
just a test proof. The negative is 
in our files. . . . Now, if you’re 
really interested. I’ll be back the 
day after tomorrow with our 
files. . I’m sure you will, Mr. 
Jones. Thank you, Mr. Jones. .” 

Dirty? Sure. Blackmail is al- 
ways dirty. But if I had a wife and 
family and a good reputation. I’d 
stick to the roast beef and forget 



E FOE EFFORT 



125 



the Roquefort. Very smelly 
Roquefort, at that. Mike liked it 
less than I did. It took some talk- 
ing, and I had to drag out the old 
one about the ends justifying the 
means, and they could well afford 
it, anyway. Besides, if there was a 
squawk, they’d get the negatives 
free. Some of them were pretty 
bad. 

So we had the cash ; not too 
much, but enough to start. Before 
we took the next step there was 
plenty to decide. There are a lot 
who earn a living by convincing 
millions that Sticko soap is better. 
We had a harder problem than 
that : we had, first, to make a 
salable and profitable product, and 
second, we had to convince many, 
many millions that our “Product” 
was absolutely honest and abso- 
lutely accurate. We all know that 
if you repeat something long enough 
and loud enough many — or most — 
will accept it as gospel truth. That 
called for publicity on an inter- 
national scale. For the skeptics 
who know better than to accept 
advertising, no matter how blatant, 
we had to use another technique. 
And since we were going to get 
certainly only one chance, we had 
to be right the first time. Without 
Mike’s machine the job would have 
been impossible; without it the job 
would have been unnecessary. 

A lot of sweat run under the 
bridge before we found what we 
thought — and we still do ! — the only 
workable scheme. We picked the 
only possible way to enter every 
mind in the world without a fight; 
the field of entertainment. Abso- 

126 



lute secrecy was imperative, and 
it was only when we reached the 
last decimal jwint that we made a 
move. We started like this. 

First we looked for a smtable 
building, or Mike did, while I flew 
east, to Rochester, for a month. 
The building he rented was an old 
bank. We had the windows sealed, 
a flossy office installed in the front 
— the bulletproof glass was my idea 
— air conditioning, a portable bar, 
electrical wiring of whatever type 
Mike’s little heart desired, and a 
blond secretary who thought she 
was working for M-E Experimen- 
tal Laboratories. When I got back 
from Rochester I took over the 
job of keeping happy the stone 
masons and electricians, while Mike 
fooled around in our suite in the 
Book where he could look out the 
window at his old store. The last 
I heard, they were .selling snake oil 
there. When the Studio, as we 
came to call it, was finished, Mike 
moved in and the blonde settled 
down to a routine of reading love 
stories and saying no to all the 
salesmen that wandered by. I left 
for Hollywood. 

I spent a week digging through 
the files of Central Casting before 
I was satisfied, but it took a month 
of snooping and some under-the- 
table cash to lease a camera that 
would handle Trucolor film. That 
took the biggest load from my mind. 
When I got back to Detroit the big 
view camera had arrived from 
Rochester, with a truckload of glass 
color plates. Ready to go. 

We made quite a ceremony of it. 
We closed the Venetian blinds and 

ASTOUNDING SCIENOK-FICTION 



I popped the cork on one of the 
bottles of champagne I’d bought. 
Tl;p blond secretary was im- 
pressed ; all slje’d been doing for her 
’ salary was to accept delivery of 
packages and crates and boxes. We 
had no wine glasses, but we made 
no fuss about that. Too nervous 
and excited to drink any more than 
one bottle, we gave the rest to the 
blonde and told her to take the rest 
of the afternoon off. After she left 
— and I think she was disappointed 
at breaking up what could have been 
a good party— :we locked up after 
her, went into the studio itself, 
locked up again and went to work. 

I’ve mentioned that the windows 
were scaled. All the inside wall 
had been painted dull black, and 
with the high ceiling that went with 
that old bank lobby, it w'as impres- 
sive. But not gloomy. Midway in 
the studio was planted the big Tru- 
color cairtera, loaded and ready. Not 
much could we see of Mike’s ma- 



chine, but I knew it was off to the 
side, set to throw on the back wall. 
Not on the wall, understand, be- 
cause the images produced are pro- 
jected into the air, like the meeting 
of the rays of two searchlights. 
Mike lifted the lid and I could see 
him silhouetted against the tiny 
lights that lit the dials. 

“Well?” he said expectantly. 

I felt pretty good just then, right 
down to my billfold. 

“It’s all yours, Mike,” and a 
switch ticked over. There he was. 
There was a youngster, dead 
twenty-five hundred years, real 
enough, almost, to touch. Alexan- 
der. Alexander of Macedon. 

Let’s take that first picture in de- 
tail. I don’t think I can ever forget 
what happened in the next year or 
so. First we followed Alexander 
through his life, from beginning to 
end. We skipped, of course, the 
little things he did, jumping ahead 
days and weeks and years at a time. 
Then we’d miss him, or find that 




H FOB EFFORT 



127 




he'd moved in space. That would 
mean we’d have to jump back and 
forth, like the artillery firing 
bracket or ranging shots, until we 
found him again. Helped only 
occasionally by his published lives, 
we were astounded to realize how 
much distortion has crept into his 
life. I often wonder why legends 
arise about tfie famous. Certainly 
their lives are as startling or appal- 
ling as fiction. • And unfortunately 
we had to hold closely to the ac- 
ce])ted histories. If we hadn’t, every 
professor w'ould have gone into his 
corner for a hearty sneer. We 
couldn’t take that chance. Not at 
' first. 

After we knew approximately 
what had happened and where, we 
used our notes to go back to what 
had seemed a particularly photo- 
genic section and work on that 
awhile. Eventually we had a fair 
idea of what we were actually going 
to film. Then we sat down and 
wrote an actual script to follow, 
making allowance for whatever 
shots we’d have to double in later. 
]\Iike used his machine as the pro- 
jector, and I operated the Trucolor 
camera at a fixed focus, like taking 
moving pictures of a movie. As 
fast as we finished a reel it would 
go to Rochester for processing, in- 
stead of one of the Hollywood out- 
fits that might have done it cheaper. 
Rochester is so used to horrible 
amateur stuff that I doubt if anyone 
ever looks at anything. When the 
reel was returned we’d run it our- 
selves to check our choice of scenes 
and color sense and so on. 

Eor example, we had to show the 

J28 



traditional quarrels with Jiis father. 
Philip. Most of that we figured on 
doing with doubles, later. Olympias, 
his mother, and the fangless snakes 
she affected, didn’t need any dou- 
bling, as we used an angle and 
amount of distance that didn’t call 
for actual conversation. The scene 
where Alexander rode the bucking 
horse no one else could ride came 
out of some biographer's head, but 
we thought it was so famous we 
couldn’t leave it out. We dubbed 
the closeups later, and the actual 
horseman was a young Scythian 
that hung around the royal stables 
for his keep. Roxanne was real 
enough, like the rest of the Per- 
sian’s wives that Alexander took 
over. Luckily most of them had 
enough poundage to look luscious. 
Philip and Parmenio and the rest 
of the characters were heavily 
bearded, which made easy the neces- 
sary doubling and dubbing-in the 
necessary speech. % (If you ever 
saw them shave in those days, you’d 
know why whiskers were popular.) 

The most trouble we had with the 
interior shots. Smoky wicks in a 
howl of lard, no matter how plenti- 
ful, are too dim even for fast film. 
Mike got around that by running 
the Trucolor camera at a single 
frame a second, wdth his machine 
paced accordingly. That accounts 
for the startling clarity and depth of 
focus we got from a lens well 
stopped down. We had all the time 
in the world to choose the best pos- 
sible scenes and camera angles; the 
best actors in the world, expensive 
camera booms, or repeated retakes 
under the most exacting director 

ASTOUNDING .SGIRNCB-FICTTON 



can’t compete with us. We had a 
lifetime from which to choose. 

Eventually we had on film about 
eighty per cent of what you saw in 
the finished picture. Roughly we 
spliced the reels together and sat 
there entranced at what we had 
actually done. Even more exciting, 
even more spectacular than we’d 
dared to hope, the lack of continuity 
and sound didn’t stop us from 
realizing that we’d done a beautiful 
job. We’d done all we could, and 
the worst was yet to come. So we 
sent for more champagne and told 
the blonde we had cause for cele- 
bration. She giggled. 

“What are you doing in there, 
anyway?” she asked. “Every sales- 
man who comes to the door wants 
to know what you’re making.” 

I opened the first bottle. “Just 
tell them you don’t know.” 

“That’s just what I’ve been tell- 
ing them. They think I’m awfully 
dumb.” We all laughed at the 
salesmen. 

Mike was thoughtful. “If we’re 
going to do this sort of thing very, 
often, we ought to have some of 
these fancy hollow-stemmed glasses.” 
The blonde was pleased with that. 
“And we could keep them in my 
bottom drawer.” Her nose wrinkled 
prettily. “These bubbles — You 
know, this is the only time I’ve ever 
had champagne, except at a wed- 
ding, and then it was only one 
glass.” 

“Pour her another,” Mike sug- 
gested. “Mine's empty, too.” I 
did. “What did you do with those 
bottles you took home last time ?” 

A blush and a giggle. “My father 



wanted to open them, but I told him 
you said to save it for a special 
occasion.” 

By that time I had my feet on her 
desk. “This is the special occasion, 
then,” I invited. “Have another. 
Miss . . . what’s your first name, 
anyway? I hate being formal after 
working hours.” 

She was shocked. “And you and 
Mr. Laviada sign my checks every 
week! It’s Ruth.” 

“Ruth. Ruth.” I rolled it around 
the piercing bubbles, and it sounded 
all right. 

She nodded. “And your name is 
Edward, and Mr. Laviada’s is Mig- 
well. Isn’t it?” and she smiled at 
him. 

“MiGELL,” he smiled back. “An 
old Spanish custom. Usually short- 
ened to Mike.” 

“If you’ll hand me another bot- 
tle,” I offered, “shorten Edward to 
Ed.” She handed it over. 

By the time we got to the fourth 
bottle we were as thick as bugs in a 
rug. It seems that she was twenty- 
four, free, white, and single, and 
loved champagne. 

“But,” she burbled fretfully, “I 
wish I knew what you were doing in 
there all hours of the day and night. 
I know you’re here at night some- 
times because I’ve seen your car out 
in front.” 

Mike thought that over. “Well,” 
he said a little unsteadily, “we take 
pictures.” He blinked one eye. 
“Might even take pictures of you if 
we were approached properly.” 

I took over. “We take pictures 
of models.” 



H FOR EFFORT 



129 



■‘Oh, no.” 

"Yes. Models of things and peo- 
ple and vvliat not. Little ones. We 
make it look like it’s real.” I think 
she was a trifle disappointed. 

“Well, now I know, and that 
makes me feel better. I sign all 
those bills from Rochester and I 
don’t know what I’m signing for. 
Except that they must be film or 
something.” 

■‘That’s- just what it is; film and 
things like that.” 

■‘Well, it bothered me — No, 
there’s two more behind the fan.” 

Only two more. She had a ca- 
pacity. I asked her how she would 
like a vacation. She hadn’t thought 
about a vacation just yet. 

I told her she’d better start think- 
ing about it. ■■We’re leaving day 
after tomorrow for Los Angeles, 
Hollywood.” 

■‘The day after tomorrow? 
Why—” 

I reassured her. “You’ll get paid 
just the same. But there’s no telling 
liow long we’ll be gone, and there 
doesn’t seem to be much use in your 
sitting around here with nothing to 
do.” ' 

From Mike “Let’s have that bot- 
tle,” and I handed it to him. I went 
on. 

■■You’ll get your checks just the 
same. I f you want, we’ll pay you in 
.'idvance so — ” 

I was getting full of champagne, 
and so were we all. Mike was hum- 
ming softly to himself, happy as a 
taco. The blonde, Ruth, was having 
a little trouble with my left eye. I 
knew just how she felt, because I 
was having a little trouble watching 



where .she overlapped the swivel 
chair. Blue eyes, sooo tall, fuzzy 
hair. Hm-m-ni. All work and no 
play — She handed me the last bottle. 

Demurely she hid a tiny hiccup. 
“I’m going to save all the corks — 
No I won’t either. My father would 
want to know what I’m thinking of, 
drinking with my bosses.” 

I said it wasn’t a good idea to an- 
noy your father. Mike said why fool 
with bad ideas, when he had a good 
one. We were interested. Nothing 
like a good idea to liven things up. 

Mike was expansive as the very 
devil. “Going to Los .\ngeles.” 

We nodded solemnly. 

“Going to Los Angeles to work.” 
Another nod. 

“Going to work in Los Angeles. 
What will we do for pretty blond 
girl to write letters ?” 

Awful. No pretty blonde to write 
letters and drink champagne. Sad 
case. 

“Gotta hire somelwdy to write let- 
ters anyway. Might not be blonde. 
No blondes in Hollywood. No good 
ones, anyway. So — ” 

I saw the wonderful idea, and 
finished for him. “.So we take 
pretty blonde to I-os Angeles to 
write letters!” 

What an idea that was ! One bot- 
tle sooner and its brilliancy would 
have been dimmed. Ruth bubbled 
like a fresh bottle and Mike and I 
sat there, smirking like mad. 

“But I can’t 1 I couldn't leave day 
after tomorrow just like that — !” . 

Mike was magnificent. “Who said 
day after tomorrow? Oianged our 
minds. Leave right now.” 



.\STm'xnix(? sr: i'.X('K-]'ir"noN 



She was appalled. “Right now! 
Just like tliat?” 

“Right now. Just like that.” I 
was firm. 

“But—” 

“No huts. Right now. Just like 
that.” 

“Nothing to wear—” 

“Buy clothes any place. Best ones 
in Los Angeles. 

“But my hair — ” 

Mike suggested a haircut in Hol- 
lywood, maybe? 

I pounded the table. It felt solid. 
“Call the airport. Three tickets.” 

She called the airport. She intim- 
idated easy. 

The airport said we could leave 
for Chicago any time on the hour, 
and change there for Los Angeles. 
Mike wanted to know why she was 
wasting time on the telephone when 
we could be on our way. Holding 
up the wheels of progress, emery 
dust in the gears. One minute to get 
her hat. 

“Call Pappy from the airport.” 

Her objections were easily brushed 
away wdth a few word-pictures of 
how much fun there was to be had 
in Hollywood. We left a sign on 
the door, “Gone to Lunch — Back in 
December,” and made the airport in 
time for the four o’clock plane, with 
no time left to call Pappy. I told 
the parking attendant to hold the car 
until he heard from me and we made 
it up the steps and into the plane 
just in time. The steps were taken 
away’ the motors snorted, and we 
w'erc off, with Ruth holding fast her 
hat in an imaginary iweeze. 



There was a two-hour layover in 
Chicago. They don’t serve liquor at 
the airport, but an obliging cab 
driver found us a convenient bar 
down the road, where Ruth made 
her call to her father. Cautiously 
we stayed away from the telephone 
booth, but from what Ruth told us, 
he must have read her the riot act. 
The bartender didn’t have cham- 
pagne, but gave us the special treat- 
ment reserved for those that order it. 
The cab driver saw that we made the 
liner two hours later. 

In Los Angeles we registered at 
the Commodore, cold sober and 
ashamed of ourselves. The next day 
Ruth went shopping for clothes for 
herself, and for us. We gave her the 
sizes and enough money to soothe 
her hangover. Mike and I did some 
telephoning. After breakfast we 
sat around until the desk clerk an- 
nounced a Mr. Lee Johnson to see 
us. 

Lee Johnson was the brisk profes- 
sional type, the high-bracket sales- 
man. Tall, rather homely, a clipped 
way of talking. We introduced our- 
selves as embryo producers. His eyes 
brightened when we said that. His 
meat. 

“Not exactly the way you think,” 
I told him. “We have already eighty 
per cent or better of the final print.” 

He wanted to know where he 
came in. 

“We have several thousand feet 
of Trucolor film. Don’t bother ask- 
ing where or when we got it. This 
footage is silent. We’ll need sound 
and. in places, speech dubbed in.” 

He nodded. “Easy enough. What 
condition is the master ?” 



j: foh effort 



AST— 5S 131 



“Perfect condition. It’s in the 
hotel vault right now. There are 
gaps in the story to fill. We’ll need 
quite a few male and female charac- 
ters. And all of these will have to 
do their doubling for cash, and not 
for screen credit.” 

Johnson raised his eyebrows. 
“And why ? Out here screen credit 
is bread and butter.” 

“Several reasons. This footage 
was made — never mind where — with 
the understanding that film credit 
would favor no one.” 

“If you’re lucky enough to catch 
your talent between pictures you 
might get away with it. But if your 
footage is worth working with, my 
boys will want screen credit. And I 
think they’re entitled to it.” 

I said that was reasonable enough. 
The technical crews were essential, 
and I wa§ prepared to pay well. Par- 
ticularly to keep their mouths closed 
until the print was ready for final 
release. Maybe even after that. 

“Before we go any further,” John- 
son rose and reached for his hat, 
“let’s take a look at that print. I 
don’t know if we can— 

I knew what he was thinking. 
Amateurs. Home movies. Feelthy 
peekchures, mebbe? 

We got the reels out of the hotel 
safe and drove to his laboratory, out 
Sunset. The top was down on his 
convertible and Mike hoped audibly 
that Ruth would have sense enough 
to get sport shirts that didn’t itch. 
“Wife?” Johnson asked carelessly. 
“Secretary,” Mike answered just 
as casually. “We flew in last night 
and she’s out getting' us some light 

132 



clothes.” Johnson’s estimation of us 
rose visibly. 

A porter came out of the labora- 
tory to carry the suitcase containing 
the film reels. It was a long, low 
building, with the offices at the front 
and the actual laboratories tapering 
off at the rear. Johnson took us in 
the side door and called for someone 
whose name we didn’t catch. The 
anonymous one was a projectionist 
who took the reels and disappeared 
into the back of the projection room. 
We sat for a minute in the soft easy- 
cliairs until the projectionist buzzed 
ready. Johnson glanced at us and 
we nodded. He clicked a switch on 
the arm of his chair and the over- 
head lights went out. The picture 
started. 

It ran a hundred and ten minutes 
as it stood. We both watched John- 
son like a cat at a rathole. When 
the tag end showed white on the 
screen he signaled with the chair- 
side buzzer for lights. They came 
on. He faced us. 

“Where did you get that print ?” 

Mike grinned at him. “Can we 
do business ?” 

“Do business ?” He was vehement. 
“You bet your life we can do busi- 
ness. We’ll do the greatest business 
you ever saw!” 

The projection man came down. 
“Hey, that’s all right. 'Where’d you 
get it ?” 

Mike looked at me. I said, “This 
isn’t to go any further.” 

Johnson looked at his man, who 
shrugged. “None of my business.” 

I dangled the hook. "That wasn’t 
made here. Never mind where.” 

Johnson rose and struck, hook, line 

ASTOCNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



and sinker. "Europe! Hni-m-m. 
Germany. No, France. Russia, 
maybe. Einstein, or Eisenstein, or 
whatever his name is ?” 

I shook my head. “Tliat doesn’t 
matter. The leads are all dead, or 
out of commission, but their heirs 
. . . well, you get what I mean.” 
Johnson saw what I meant. “Ab- 
solutely right. No point taking any 
chances. Where’s the rest — ?” 
“Who knows ? We were lucky to 
salvage tliat much. Can do?” 

“Can do.” He thought for a min- 
ute. “Get Bernstein in here. Better 
get Kessler and Marrs, too.” The 
projectionist left. In a few minutes 
Kessler, a heavy-set man,and.Marrs, 
a young, nervous chain-smoker, came 
in with Bernstein, the sound man. 
We were introduced all around and 
john.son asked if we minded .sitting 
through another showing. 

' “Nope. We like it better than 
you do.” 

Not quite. Kessler and Marrs and 
Bernstein, the minute the film was 
over, bombarded us with startled 
questions. We gave them the same 
answers we’d given Johnson. But 
we were pleased with tlie reception, 
and said so. 

Kessler grunted. “I’d like to know 
who was behind that camera. Best 
I've seen, by Cripes, since ‘BenHur.’ 
Better than ‘Ben Hur.’ The boy’s 
good.” 

I grunted right back at him. 
"That’s- the only thing I edn tell you. 
The photography was done by the 
l)oys you’re talking to right now. 
Thanks for the kind word.” 

All four of them stared. 

Mike said, “That’s right.” 



“Hey, hey!” from Marrs. They 
all looked at us with new respect. 
It felt.good. 

Johnson broke into the silence 
when it became awkward. “What’s 
next on the score card?” 

We got down to cases. Mike, as 
usual, was content to sit there with 
his eyes half closed, taking it all in, 
letting me do all the talking. 

“We want sound dul)bed in all the 
way through.” 

“Pleasure,” said Bernstein. 

“At least a dozen, maybe more, of 
speaking actors with a close resem- 
blance to the leads you’ve seen.” 

Johnson was confident. “Easy. 
Central Casting has everybody’s pic- 
ture since the Year One.” . 

“I know. We’ve already checked 
that. No trouble there. They'll have 
to take the cash and let the credit go, 
for reasons I’ve already explained to 
Mr. Johnson.” 

A moan from Marrs. “I bet I get 
that job.” 

Johnson was snappish. “You do. 
What else?” to me. 

I didn’t know. “Except that we 
have no plans for distribution as yet. 
That will have to be worked out.” 

“Like falling off a log.” Johnson 
was happy about that. “One look at 
the rushes and United Artists would 
spit in Shakespeare’s eye.” 

Marrs came in. “What about the 
other shots ? Got a writer lined up ?” 

“We’ve got what will pass for the 
shooting script, or would have in a 
w'eek or so. Want to go over it with 
us ?” 

He’d like that. 

“How much time have we got?” 
interposed Kessler. “This is going 



j: 7'’OR EFFORT 



1.S3 



to be a job. When do we want it?” 
Already it was “we.” 

“Yesterday is when we want it,” 
snapped Johnson, and he rose. “Any 
ideas about music ? No? We’ll try 
for Werner Janssen and his boys. 
Bernstein, you’re responsible for 
that print from now on. Kessler, 
get your crew in and have a look at 
it. Marrs, you’ll go with Mr. Lefko 
and Mr. Laviada through the files at 
Central Casting at. their convenience. 
Keep in touch with them at the Com- 
modore. N ow, i f you'll step into my 
office, we’ll discuss the financial ar- 
rangements — ” 

As easy as all that. 

Oh, I don’t say that it was easy 
work or anything like that, because 
in the next few months we were 
playing Busy Bee. What with run- 
ning down the only one registered at 
Central Casting who looked like 
Alexander himself, he turned out to 
be a young Armenian who had given 
up hope of ever being called from 
the extra lists and had gone home to 
Santee — casting and rehearsing the 
rest of the actors and swearing at 
the costumers and the boys who built 
the sets, we were kept hopping. Even 
Ruth, who had reconciled her father 
with soothing letters, for once earned 
her salary. We took turns shooting 
dictation at her until we had a script 
that satisfied Mike and myself and 
young Marrs, who turned out to be 
clever as a fox on dialogue. 

What I really meant is that it was 
easy, and immensely gratifying, to 
crack the shell of the tough boys who 
had seen epics and turkeys come and 
go. They were really impressed by 

134 



what we had done. Kessler was 
disappointed when we refused to be 
bothered with photographing the rest 
of the film. We just batted our eyes 
and said that we were too busy, that 
we were perfectly confident that he 
would do as well as we could. He 
outdid himself, and us. I dpn’t know 
what we would have done if he had 
asked us for any concrete advice. 1 
suppose, when I think it all over, 
that the boys we met and worked 
with were so tired of working with 
the usual mine-run Grade B’s, that 
they were glad to meet someone that 
knew the difference between glycerin 
tears and reality and didn't care if it 
cost two dollars extra. They had 
us placed as a couple of city slickers 
with plenty on the ball. I hope. 

Finally it was all over with. We 
all sat in the projection room ; Mike 
and I, Marrs and Johnson, Kessler 
and Bernstein, and all the lesser 
technicians that had split up the 
really enormous amount of work 
that had been done watched the 
finished product. It was terrific. 
Everyone had done his work well. 
When Alexander came on the 
screen, he was Alexander the Great. 
(The Armenian kid got a good bonus 
for that. ) All that blazing color, all 
that wealth and magnificence and 
glamor seemed to flare right out of 
the screen and sear across your 
mind. Even Mike and I, who had 
seen the original, were on the edge 
of our seats. 

The sheer realism and magnitude 
of the battle scenes, I think, really 
made the picture. Gore, of course, 
is glorious when it’s all tnake-believe 
and the dead get up to go to lunch. 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



But when Bill Mauldin sees a pic- 
ture and sells a breathless article on 
the similarity of infantrymen of all 
ages — well, Mauldin knows what 
war is like. So did the infantrymen 
throughout the world who wrote let- 
ters comparing Alexander’s Arbcla 
to Anzio and the Argonne. The 
weary peasant, not stolid at all, 
trudging and trudging into mile after 
mile of those dust-laden plains and 
ending as a stinking, naked, ripped 
corpse peeping under a mound of 
flies isn’t any different when he car- 
ries a sarissa instead of a rifle. That 
we’d tried to make obvious, and we 
succeeded. 

When the lights came up in the 
projection room we knew we had a 
winner. Individually we shook hands 
all around, proud as a bunch of pen- 
guins, and with chests out as far. 
The rest of the men filed out and we 
retired to Johnson’s office. He poured 
a drink all around and got down to 
Imsiness. 

“How about releases?” 

I asked him what he thought. 

“Write your own ticket,” he 
shrugged. I don’t know whether or 
not you know it, but the word has 
already gone around that you’ve got 
something.” 

I told him we’d had calls at the 
hotel from various .sources, and 
named them. 

“See what I mean ? 1 know those 
babies. Kiss them out if you want 
to keep your shirt. And while I’m 
at it, you owe us quite a bit. I sup- 
])ose you’ve got it.” 

“We’ve got it.” 

“I was afraid you would. If you 
didn’t, I’d be the one that would 



have your shirt.” He grinned, but 
we all knew he meant it. “-A.11 right, 
that’s settled. Let’s talk about re- 
lease. 

“There are two or three outfits 
around town that will want a crack 
at it. My boys will have the word 
spread around in no time ; there’s no 
point in trying to keep them quiet 
any longer. I know — they’ll have 
sense enough not to talk about the 
things you want off the record. I’ll 
see to that. But you're top dog right 
now. You got loose cash, you’ve got 
the biggest potential gross I’ve ever 
seen, and you don’t have to take the 
first offer. That’s important, in this 
game.” 

“How would you like to handle it 
yourself ?” 

“I’d like to try. The outfit I’m 
thinking of needs a feature right 
now, and they don’t know I know it. 
They’ll pay and jiay. What’s in it 
for me ?” 

“That,” I said, “we can talk about 
later. And I think I know just 
what you’re thinking. We’ll take the 
usual terms and we don’t care if you 
hold up whoever you deal with. 
What we don’t know won’t hurt us.” 
That’s what he was thinking, all 
right. That’s a cutthroat game out 
there. 

“Good. Kessler, get your setup 
ready for duplication.” 

“Always ready.” 

“Marrs, start the ball rolling on 
publicity . . . what do you want to 
do about that?” to us. 

Mike and I had talked about that 
before. “As far as we’re concerned,” 
I said slowly, “do as you think best. 
Personal publicity, O.K. We won’t 



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look for it, but we won’t dodge it. 
As far as that goes, we’re the local 
yokels making good. Soft pedal any 
questions about where the picture 
was made, without being too obvi- 
ous. You’re going to have trouble 
when you talk about the nonexistent 
actors, but you ought to be able to 
figure out something.” 

Marrs groaned and Johnson 
grinned. “He’ll figure out some- 
thing.” 

“As far as technical credit goes, 
we’ll be glad to see you get all you 
can, becau.se you’ve done a .swell 
job.” Kessler took that as a per- 
.sonal compliment, and it was. “You 
might as well know now, before we 
go any further, that some of the 
work came right from Detroit.” 
They all sat up at that. 

“Mike and I have a new process 
of model and trick work.” Kessler 
ojjened his mouth to say something 
but thought better of it. “We’re not 
going to say what was done, or how 
much was done in the laboratory, but 
you’ll admit that it defies detection.” 

About that they were fervent. “I’ll 
say it defies detection. In the game 
this long and process work gets by 
me . . . where — ” 

“I’m not going to tell you that. 
What we’ve got isn’t patented and 
won’t be, as long as we can hold it 
up.” There wasn’t any griping there. 
These men knew process work when 
they saw it. If they didn’t see it, it 
was good. They could understand 
why we’d want to keep a process 
that good a secret. 

“We can practically guarantee 
there’ll be more work for you to do 
later on.” Their interest was plain. 



“We’re not going to predict when, 
or make any definite arrangement, 
but we still have a trick or two in 
the deck. We like the way we’ve 
been getting along, and we want to 
stay that way. Now, if you’ll excuse 
us, we have a date with a blonde.” 

Johnson was right about the bid- 
ding for the release. We — or rather 
Johnson — made a very profitable 
deal with United Amusement and 
the affiliated theaters. Johnson, the 
bandit, got his percentage from us 
and likely did better with United. 
Kessler and Johnson’s boys took 
huge ads in the trade journals to 
boast about their connections with 
the Academy Award Winner. Not 
only the Academy, but every award 
that ever went to any picture. Even 
the Europeans went overboard. 
They’re the ones that make a fetish 
of realism. They knew the real thing 
when they saw it, and so did every- 
one else. 

Our success went to Ruth’s head. 
In no time she wanted a secretary. ^ 
At that, she needed one to fend off ' 
the screwballs that popped out of the 
woodwork. So we let her hire a girl 
to help out. She picked a good 
typist, about fifty. Ruth is a smart 
girl, in a lot of ways. Her father 
showed signs of wanting to see the 
Pacific, so we raised her salary on 
condition he’d stay away. Tlie three 
of us were having too much fun. 

The picture opened at the same 
time in both New York and Holly- 
wood. We went to the premiere in 
great style with Ruth between us, 
swollen like a trio of bullfrogs. It’s 
a great feeling to sit on the floor. 



W FOR EFFORT 



187 



early in the morning, and read re- 
views that make you feel like float- 
ing. It’s a better feeling to have a 
mintful of money. Johnson and his 
men were right along with us. I 
don’t think he could have been too 
flush in the beginning, and we all got 
a kick out of riding the crest. 

It was a good-sized wave, too. \\’e 
had all the personal publicity we 
wanted, and more. Somehow the 
word was out that we had a new 
gadget for process photography, and 
every big studio in town was after 
what they thought would be a mighty 
economical thing to have around. 
The studios that didn’t have a spec- 
tacle scheduled looked at the receipts 
of “Ale.xander” and promptly sched- 
uled a spectacle. We drew some very 
good offers, Johnson said, but we 
made a series of long faces and broke 
the news that we were leaving for 
Detroit the next day, and to hold the 
fort awhile. I don’t think he thought 
we actually meant it, but we did. We 
left the next day. 

Back in Detroit we went right to 
work, helped by the knowledge, that 
we were on the right track. Ruth 
was kept busy turning away the 
countless would-be visitors. We ad- 
mitted no reporters, no salesmen, no 
one. We had no time. We were 
using the view camera. Plate after 
plate we sent to Rochester for devel- 
oping. .A print of each was returned 
to us and the plate was held in Roch- 
ester for our disposal. We sent to 
New York for a representative of 
one of the biggest publishers in the 
country. We made a deal. 

Your main library has a set of the 
books we published, if you’re in- 

138 



terested. Huge heavy volumes, 
hundreds of them, each page a razor- 
sharp blowup from an 8.x 10 nega- 
tive. A set of those books went to 
every major library and university in 
the world. Mike and I got a real 
kick out of solving some of the prob- 
lems that have had savants guessing 
for years. In the Roman volume, 
for example, we solved the trireme 
problem with a series of pictures, not 
only the interior of a trireme, but a 
line-of-battle quinquereme. (Natu- 
rally, the professors and amateur 
yachtsmen weren’t convinced at all.) 
We had a series of aerial shots of 
the City of Rome taken a hundred 
years apart, over a millennium. 
Aerial views of Ravenna and Lon- 
dinium. Palmyra and Pompeii, of 
Eboracum and Byzantium. Oh, we 
had the time of our lives! We had 
a volume for Greece and for Rome, 
for Persia and for Crete, for Egypt 
and for the Eastern Empire. We 
had pictures of the Parthenon and 
the Pharos, pictures of Hannibal and 
Caractacus and Vercingctorix, pic- 
tures of the Walls of Babylon and 
the building of the pyramids and the 
palace of Sargon, pages from the 
Lost Books of Livy and the plays of 
Euripedes. Things like that. 

Terrifically expensive, a second 
printing sold at cost to a surprising 
number of private individuals. If the 
cost had been less, historical interest 
would have become even more the 
fad of the moment. 

When the flurry had almost died 
down, some Italian digging in the 
hitherto-unexcavated section of ash- 
buried Pompeii, dug right into a tiny 
buried temple right where our aerial 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



shot had showed it to be. Ills budget 
was expanded and he found more 
ash-covered ruins that agreed with 
our aerial layout, ruins that hadn’t 
seen the light of day for almost two 
thousand years. Everyone promptly 
wailed that we were the luckiest 
guessers in captivity ; the head of 
some California cult suspected aloud 
that we were the reincarnations of 
two gladiators named Joe. 

To get some peace and quiet Mike 
and I moved into our studio, lock, 
stock, and underwear. The old bank 
vault had never been removed, at our 
request, and it served well to store 
our equipment when we weren’t 
:iround. All the mail Ruth couldn’t 
handle we disposed of, unread ; the 
old bank building began to look like 
a well-patronized soup kitchen. We 
hired burly private detectives to 
handle the more obnoxious visitors 
and subscribed to a telegraphic pro- 
tective service. We had another job 
to do, another full-length feature. 

We still stuck to the old historical 
theme. This time we tried to do 
what Gibbon did in the Decline and 
Fall of the Roman Empire. And, I 
think, we were rather successful, at 
that. In four hours you can’t com- 
pletely cover two thousand years, but 
you can, as we did, show the crack- 
ing up of a great civilization, and 
how painful the process can be. The 
criticism we drew for almost ignor- 
ing Christ and Christianity was un- 
just, we think, and unfair. Very- 
few knew then, or know now, that 
we had included, as a kind of trial 
balloon, some footage of Christ Him- 
self, and His times. This footage 
we had to cut. The Board of Re- 



view, as you know, is both Catholic 
and Protestant. They — the Board — 
went right up in arms. We didn’t 
protest very hard when they claimed 
our “treatment” was irreverent, in- 
decent, and biased and inaccurate 
“by any Christian standard. Why,” 
they wailed, “it doesn’t even look 
like Him,” and they w-ere right; it 
didn’t. Not any picture they ever 
saw. Right then and there we decided 
that it didn’t pay to tamper with any- 
one’s religious beliefs. That’s why 
you’ve never seen anything emanat- 
ing from us that conflicted even re- 
motely with the accepted historical, 
sociological, or religious features of 
Someone Who Knew Better. That 
Roman picture, by the way, — but not 
accidentally — deviated so little from 
the textbooks you conned in school 
that only a few enthusiastic special- 
ists called our attention to what they 
insisted were errors. W’e were still 
in no position to do any mass rewrit- 
ing of history, because we were un- 
able to reveal just where we got our 
information. 

Johnson, when he saw the Roman 
epic, mentally clicked high his heels. 
His men went right to work, and we 
handled the job as we had the first. 
One day Kessler got me in a corner, 
dead earnest. 

“Ed,” he said, “I’m going to find 
out where you got that footage if 
it’s the last thing I ever do.” 

I fold him that some day he would. 

“And I don’t mean some day, 
either; I niean right now. That 
bushwa about Europe might go once, 
but not twice. I know better, and so 



K POn KPPORT 



130 



does everyone else. Kow, what about 
it?” 

I told him I’d have to consult 
Mike and I did. We were up. against 
it. We called a conference. 

“Kessler tells me he has troubles. 
I guess you all know what they are.” 
They all knew. 

Johnson spoke up. “He’s right, 
too. We know better. Where did 
you get it ?” 

I turned to Mike. “Want to do 
the talking?” 

A shake of his head. “You’re do- 
ing all right.” 

“All right.” Kessler hunched a 
little forward and Marts lit another 
cigarette. “We weren’t lying and we 
weren’t exaggerating w'hen we said 
the actual photography was ours. 
Every frame of film was taken right 
here in this country, within the last 
few' months. Just how — I won’t 
mention why or where — we can’t tell 
you jtu^ now.” Kessler snorted in 
disgust. “Let me finish. 

“We all know that w'e’re cashing 
in, hand over fist. And we're going 
to cash in some more. We have, on 
our personal schedule, five more pic- 
tures. Three of that five we want 
you to handle as you did the others. 
The last two of the five wdll show 
you both the reason for all the child- 
ish secrecy, as Kessler calls it, and 
another motive that we have so far 
kept hidden. The last two pictures 
will show you both our motives and 
our methods ; one is as important as 
the other. Now — is that enough? 
Can we go ahead on that basis?” 

It wasn’t enough for Kessler. 
“That doesn’t mean a thing to me. 
What are w'e, a bunch of hacks?” 



Johnson was thinking about his 
bank balance. “Five more. Tw'o 
years, maybe four.” 

Marrswas skeptical. “Who do you 
think you’re going to kid that long? 
Where’s your studio ? W’here’s your 
talent? Where do you shoot your 
exteriors? Where do you get your 
costumes and your extras? In one 
single shot you’ve got forty thousand 
extras, if you’ve got one! Maybe 
you can shut me up, but who’s going 
to answer the questions that Metro 
and Fox and Paramount and RKO 
have been asking ? Those boys aren’t 
fools, they know theirbusiness. How 
do you expect me to handle any pub- 
licity when r don’t know what the 
score is, -myself?” 

Johnson told him to pipe down for 
awhile and let him think. Mike and 
I didn’t like this one bit. But what 
could we do — tell the-truth and end 
up in a strait- jacket? 

“Can we do it this way ?” he finally 
a.sked. “Marrs : these boys have an 
in with the Soviet Government. 
They work in some place in Siberia, 
maybe. Nobody gets within miles of 
there. No one ever knows what the 
Russians are doing — ” 

“Nope!” Marrs was definite. “Any 
hint that these came from Russia 
and we’d all be a bunch of Reds. 
Cut the gross in half.” 

Johnson began to pick up speed. 
“All right, not from Russia. From 
one of these little republics fringed 
around Siberia or Armenia or one 
of those places. They’re not Russian- 
made films at all. In fact, they’ve 
been made by some of these Germans 
and Austrians the Russians took 
over and moved after the War. The 



140 



ASTOUXntXO SOTKXCE-FTCTION' 



war fever had died down enough for 
people to realize that the Germans 
knew their stuff occasionally. The old 
sympathy racket for these refugees 
struggling with faulty equipment, 
lousy climate, making super-specta- 
cles and smuggling them out under 
the nose of the Gestapo or whatever 
they call it — That’s it!” 

Doubtfully, from Marrs; “And 
the Russians tell the world we’re 
nuts, that they haven’t got any loose 
Germans ?” 

That, Johnson overrode. '“Who 
reads the back pages? Who pays 
any attention to what the Russians 
say ? Who cares ? They might even 
think we’re telling the truth and start 
looking around their own backyard 
for something that isn’t there! All 
right with you?” to Mike and my- 
sel f . 

I looked at Mike and he looked 
at me. 

“O.K. with us.” 

“O.K. with the rest df you ? Kess- 
ler ? Bernstein ?” 

They weren’t too agreeable, and 
certainly not happy, but they agreed 
to play games until we gave the 
w’ord. 

We w'ere warm in our thanks. 
■’You won’t regret it,” 

Kessler doubted that very much, 
but Johnson eased them all out, back 
to work. Another hurdle leaped, or 
sidestepped. 

■’Rome” was released on schedule 
and drew the same friendly review's. 
■’Friendly” is the wrong word for 
reviews that stretched ticket line-ups 
blocks long. Marrs did a good job 
on the ])ublicity. Even that chain of 



newspapers that afterward turned on 
us so viciously fell for Marrs’ word 
wizardry and ran full-page editorials 
urging the reader to see “Rome.” 

With our third picture, “Flame 
Over France,” we corrected a few 
misconceptions about the French 
Revolution, and began stepping on a 
few tender toes. Luckily, however, 
and not altogether by design, there 
happened to be in power in Paris a 
liberal government. They backed us 
to the hilt with the confirmation we 
needed. At our request they released 
a lot of documents that had hitherto 
conveniently been lost in the caver- 
nous recesses of the Bibliotheque 
Nationale. Fve forgotten the nameof 
whoever happened to be the peren- 
nial pretender to the French throne. 
At, Fm sure, the subtle prodding of 
one of Marrs’ ubiquitous publicity 
men, the pretender sued us for our 
whole net, alleging the defamation 
of the good name of file Bourbons. 
A lawyer Johnson dug up for us 
sucked the poor chump into a court- 
room and cut him to bits. Not even 
six cents damages did he get. Sam- 
uels, the lawyer, and Marrs drew a 
good-sized bonus, and the pretender 
moved to Honduras. 

Somewhere around this point, I 
lielieve, did the tone of the press be- 
gin to change. Up until then we’d 
been regarded as crosses between 
Shakespeare and Barnum. Since 
long obscure facts had been dredged 
into the light, a few well-known pes- 
simists began to wonder sotto voce if 
we weren’t just a pair of blasted 
pests. “Should leave well enough 
alone.” Only our huge advertising 
budget kept them from saying more. 



n FOR EFFORT 



141 



I’m going to stop right here and 
say something about our personal life 
while all this was going on. Mike 
I’ve kept in the background pretty 
well, mostly because he wants it that 
way. He lets me do all the talk- 
ing and stick my neck out while he 
sits in the most comfortable chair in 
sight. I yell and I argue and he just 
sits there; hardly ever a word com- 
ing out of that dark-brown pan, cer- 
tainly never an indication showing 
that behind those polite eyebrows 
there’s a brain — and a sense of 
humor and wit — faster and as deadly 
as a bear trap. Oh, I know we’ve 
played around, sometimes with a 
loud bang, but we’ve been, ordinar- 
ily, too busy and too preoccupied 
with what we were doing to waste 
any time. Ruth, while she was with 
us, was a good dancing and drinking 
partner. She was young, she was al- 
most what you’d call beautiful, and 
she seemed to like being with us,- 
For awhile I had a few ideas about 
her that miglrt; have developed into 
something serious. We both — I 
should say, all three of us — found ' 
out in time that we looked at a lot of 
things too differently. So we weren’t 
too disappointed when she signed 
with, Metro. Her contract meant 
what she thought was all the fame 
and money and happiness in the 
world, plus the personal attention she 
was doubtless entitled to have. They 
put her in Class B’s and serials and 
she, financially, is better off than she 
ever expected to be. Emotionally, I 
don’t know. We heard from her 
sometin'ie ago, and I think she’s about 
due for another divorce. Maybe it’s 
just as well. 



But let's get away from Ruth. I’m 
ahead of myself, anyway. All this 
time Mike and I had been working 
together, our approach to the final 
payoff had been divergent. Mike was 
hopped on the idea of making a bet- 
ter world, and doing that by making 
war impossible. “War,” he’s often 
said, “war of any kind is what has 
made man spend most of his history 
in merely staying alive. Now, with 
the atom to use, he has within him- 
self the seed of self-extennination. 
So help me, Ed, I’m going to do my 
share of stopping that, or I don’t see 
any ]>oint in living. I mean it !” 

He did mean it. He told me that 
in almost the same words the first 
day we met. Then. I tagged that 
idea as a pipe dream picked up on 
an empty stomach. I saw his ma- 
chine only as a path to a luxurious 
and personal Nirvana, and I thought 
he’d soon be going my way. I was 
wrong. 

You can’t live, or work, with a 
likable person without admiring some 
of the qualities that make that per- 
son likable. Another thing; it’s a 
lot easier to worry about the woes of 
the world when you haven’t any 
yourself. It’s a lot easier to have a 
conscience when you can afford it. 
When I donned the rose-colored 
glasses half my battle was won; 
when I realized how grand a world 
this could be, the battle was over. 
That was about the time of “Flame 
Over France,” I think. The actual 
time isn’t important. M’hat is im- 
portant is that, from that time on, 
we became the tightest team possible. 
Since then the only thing we’ve dif- 
fered on would be the time to knock 



142 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



off for a sandwich. Most of our 
leisure time, what we had of it, has 
been spent in locking vip for the 
night, rolling out the portable bar, 
opening just enough beer to feel 
good, and relaxing. Maybe, after 
one or two, we might diddle the dials 
of the machine, and go rambling. 

Together we’ve been everywhere 
and seen anything. It might be a 
good night to check up on Francois 
Villon, that faker, or maybe we 
might chase around with Haroun-el- 
Rashid. (If there was ever a man 
born a few hundred years too soon, 
it was that careless caliph.) Or if 
we were in a bad or discouraged 
mood we might follow the Thirty 
Years War for a while, or if we 
were real raffish we might inspect 
the dressing rooms at Radio City. 
For Mike the crackup of Atlantis 
has always had an odd fascination, 
jjrobably because he’s afraid that 
man will do it again, now that he’s 
rediscovered nuclear energy. And if 
I doze off he’s quite apt to go back 
to the very Beginning, back to the 
start of the world as we know it 
now. (It wouldn’t do any good to 
tell you what went before that.) 

When I stop to think, it’s prob- 
ably just as well that neither of us 
married. We, of course, have hopes 
for the future, but at present we’re 
both tired of the whole human race ; 
tired of greedy faces and hands. 
With a world that puts a premium 
on wealth and power and strength, 
it’s no wonder what decency there is 
stems from fear of what’s here now, 
or fear of what’s hereafter. We’ve 
seen so much of the hidden actions 
of the world — call it snooping, if 



you like — that w'e've learned to dis- 
regard the surface indications of 
kindness and good. Only once did 
Mike and I ever look into the pri- 
vate life of someone we knew and 
liked and respected. Once was 
enough. From that day on we made 
it a point to take people as they 
seemed. Let’s get away from that. 

The next two pictures we released 
in rapid succession; the first “Free- 
dom for Americans,” the American 
Revolution, and “The Brothers and 
the Guns,” the American Civil War. 
Bang! Every third politician, a lot 
of so-called “educators,” and all the 
professional patriots started after 
our scalps. Every single chapter of 
the DAR, the Sons- of Union Vet- 
erans, and the Daughters of the 
Confederacy pounded their collec- 
tive heads against the wall. The 
South w'ent frantic; every state in 
the Deep South and one state on the 
border flatly banned both pictures, 
the second because it was truthful, 
and the first because censorship is 
a contagious disease. They stayed 
banned until the professional politi- 
cians got wise. The bans were re- 
voked. and the choke-collar and 
string-tie brigade pointed to both 
pictures as horrible examples of 
what some people actually believed 
and thought, and felt pleased that 
someone had given them an oppor- 
tunity to roll out the barrel and beat 
the drums that sound sectional and 
racial hatred. 

New England was tempted to 
stand on its dignity, but couldn’t 
stand the strain. North of New York 
both pictures were Itanned. In New 



R FOU KFFOUT 



143 




York state the rural representatives 
voted en bloc, and the ban was 
clamped on statewide. Special trains 
ran to Delaware, where the corpora- 
tions were too busy to pass another 
law. Libel suits flew like spaghetti, 
and although the extras blared the 
filing of each new suit, very few 
knew that we lost not one. Although 
we had to appeal almost every suit 
to higher courts, and in some cases 
request a change -of venue which 
was seldom granted, the documen- 
tary proof furnished by the record 
cleared us once we got to a judge, 
or series of judges, with no fences 
to mend. 

It was a mighty rasp we drew over 
wounded ancestral pride. We had 
shown that not all the mighty had 
haloes of purest gold, that not all 
the Redcoats were strutting bullies 
— nor angels, and the British Em- 
pire, except South Africa, refused 
entry to both pictures and made vio- 
lent passes at the State Department. 
The spectacle of Southern and New 
England congressmen approving the 
efforts of a foreign ambassador to 
suppress free speech drew hilarious 
hosannahs from certain quarters. 
H. L. Mencken gloated in the clover, 
doing loud nip-ups, and the news- 
papers hung on the triple-horned di- 
lemma of anti-foreign, pro-patriotic, 
and quasi-logical criticism. In De^ 
troit the Ku Klux Klan fired an 
anemic cross on our doorstep, and 
the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the 
NAACP,. and the WCTU passed 
flattering resolutions. We forwarded 
the most vicious and obscene letters 
— together wdth a few names and ad- 
dresses that hadn’t been originally 



ASTOIINTHNO SCIKXCK-FICTtO^• 




signed — to our lawyers and the Post 
Office Dejiartment, There were no 
convictions south of Illinois. 

Johnson and his boys made hay. 
Johnson had pyramided his bets into 
an international distributing organi- 
zation, and pushed Marrs into hiring 
every top press agent either side of 
the Rockies. What a job they did! 
In no time at all there were two defi- 
nite schools of thought that over- 
flowed into the public letter boxes. 
One school held that we had no busi- 
ness raking up old mud to throw, 
that such things were better left for- 
gotten and forgiven, that nothing 
wrong had ever happened, and if it 
had, we were liars anyway. The 
other school reasoned more to our 
liking. Softly and slowly at first, 
then with a triumphant shout, this 
fact began to emerge; such things 
had actually happened, and could 
ballpen again, were possibly happen- 
ing even now ; had happened because 
twisted truth had too long left its 
imprint on international sectional, 
and racial feelings. It jdeased us 
when many began to agree, with us, 
that it is important to forget the 
past, but that it is even more impor- 
tant to understand and evaluate it 
with a generous and unjaundiced 
eye. That was what we were trying 
to bring out. 

The banning that occurred in the 
various states hurt the gross receipts 
only a little, and we were vindicated 
in Johnson’s mind. .He had dolefully 
predicted loss of half the national 
gross because “you can’t tell the 
truth in a movie and get away with 
it. Not if the house holds over three 
hundred.’’ Not even on the stage? 



“Who goes to anything but a movie ?” 
So far things had gone just about 
as. we’d planned. We’d earned and 
received more publicity, favorable 
and otherwise, than anyone living. 
Most of it stemmed from the fact 
that our doing had been newsworthy. 
Some, naturally, had been the ninety- 
day -wonder material that fills a 
thirsty newspaper. W e had been very 
careful to make our enemies in the 
strata that can afford to fight back. 
Remember the old saw about know- 
ing a man by the enemies he makes ? 
Well, publicity was our ax. Here’s 
how we put an edge on it. 

I called Johnson in Hollywood. 
He was glad to hear from us. “Long 
time no see. What’s the pitch, Ed ?’’ 
“I want some lip readers. And I 
w'ant them yesterday, like you tell 
your boys.’’ 

“Lip readers? Are you nuts? 
What do you want with lip 
readers ?’’ 

“Never mind why. I want lip 
readers. Can you get them ?’’ 

“How should I know? What do 
you want them for?” 

“I said, can you get them ?” 

He was doubtful. “I think you’ve 
been working too hard,” 

“Look—” 

“Now, I didn’t say I couldn’t. 
Cool off. When do you want them ? 
And how many?” 

“Better write this down. Ready? 
I want lip readers for these lan- 
guages ; English, French, German, 
Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Greek, 
Belgian, Dutch and Spanish.” 

“ED LEFKO, HAVE YOU 
GONE CRAZY?” 



R FOB EFFORT 



14.5 



. I guess it didn’t sound very sensi- 
ble, at that. “Maybe I have. But 
those languages are essential. If you 
run across any who can work in any 
other language, hang on to them. I 
might need them, too.” I could see 
him sitting in front of his telephone, 
wagging his head like mad. Crazy. 
The heat must have got Lefko, goo'd 
old Ed. “Did you hear what I said ?” 

“Yes, I heard you. If this Is a 
rib—” 

“No rib. Dead serious.” 

He began to get mad. “Where you 
think I’m going to get lip readers, 
out of my hat ?” 

“That’s your worry. I’d suggest 
you start with the local School for 
the Deaf.” He was silent. “Now, 
get this into your head ; this isn’t a 
rib, this is the real thing. I don’t 
care what you do, or where you go, 
or what you spend — I want those 
lip readers in Hollywood when we 
get there or I want to know they’re 
on the way.” 

“When are you going to get 
here ?” 

I said I wasn’t sure. “Probably a 
day or two. We’ve got a few loose 
ends to flean up.” 

He swore a blue streak at the in- 
equities of fate. “You’d better have 
a good story when you do — ” I 
hung up. 

Mike met me at the studio. “Talk 
to Johnson?” I told him, and he 
laughed. “Does sound crazy, I sup- 
pose. But he’ll get them, if they 
exist and like money. He’s the Origi- 
nal Resourceful Man.” 

I tossed my hat in a corner. “I’m 
glad this is about over. Your end 
caught up ?” 

146 



“Set and ready to go. The fdms 
and the notes are on the way, the 
real estate company is ready to take 
over the lease, and the girls are paid 
up to date, with a little extra.” 

I opened a bottle of beer for my- 
self. Mike had one. “How about 
the office files ? How about the bar. 
here ?” 

“The files go to the bank to be 
stored. The bar? Hadn’t thought 
about it.” 

The beer was cold. “Have it 
crated and send it to Johnson.’’ 

We grinned, together. “Johnson 
it is. He’ll need it.” 

I nodded at the machine. ‘What 
about that ?” 

“That goes with us on the plane 
as air express.” He looked closely 
at me. “What’s the matter with you 
— jitters ?” 

“Nope. Willies. Same thing.” 
“Me, too. Your clothes and mine 
left this morning.” 

“Not even a clean shirt left ?” 
“Not even a clean shirt. Just 
like—” 

I finished it. “ — the first trip with 
Ruth. A little different, maybe.” 
Mike said slowly. “A lot differ- 
ent.” I opened another beer. ‘’Any- 
thing you want around here, any- 
thing else to be done?” I said no. 
“O.K. Let’s get this over with. 
We’ll put what we need in the car. 
We’ll stop at the Courville Bar be- 
fore we hit the airport.” 

I didn’t get it. “There’s still beer 
left—” 

“But no champagne.” 

I got it. “O.K. I’m dumb, at 
times. Let’s go.” 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



We loaded the machine into the 
car, and the bar, left the studio keys 
at the corner grocery for the real 
estate company, and headed for the 
airport by way of the Courville Bar. 
Ruth was in California, but Joe had 
champagne. We got to the airport 
late. 

Marrs met us in Los Angeles. 
“What’s up? You’ve got Johnson 
running around in circles.’’ 

“Did he tell you why ?’’ 

“Sounds crazy to me. Couple of 
reporters inside. Got anything for 
them ?” 

“Not right now. Let’s get going.’’ 

In Johnson’s private office we got 
a chilly reception, “This better be 
good. Where do you expect to find 
someone to lipread in Chinese? Or 
Russian, for that matter?’’ 

We all sat down. “What have 
you got so far?’’ 

“Besides a headache ?’’ He handed 
me a short list. 

I scanned it. “How long before 
you can get them here ?’’ 

An explosion. “How long before 
I can get them here? Am I your 
errand boy ?’’ 

“For all practical purposes you 
are. Quit the fooling. How about 
it ?’’ Marrs snickered at the look on 
Johnson’s face. 

“What are you smirking at, you 
moron ?’’ Marrs gave in and laughed 
outright, and I did, too. “Go ahead 
, and laugh. This isn’t funny. When 
I called the S.tate School for the 
Deaf they hung up. Thought I was 
some practical joker. We’ll skip that. 

“There’s three women and a man 
on that list. They cover English, 
French, Spanish, and German. Two 

E f6r effort 



of them are working in the East, and 
I’m waiting for answers to telegrams 
I sent them. One lives in Pomona 
and one works for the Arizona 
School for the Deaf. That’s the best 
I could do.’’ 

We thought that over. “Get on 
the phone. Talk to every state in 
the union if you have to, or over- 
seas.’’ 

Johnson kicked the desk. “And 
what are you going to do with them, 
if I’m that lucky?’’ 

“You’ll find out. Get them on 
planes and fly them here, and we’ll 
talk turkey when they get here. I 
want a projection room, not yours, 
and a good bonded court reporter.’’ 

He asked the world to appreciate 
what a life he led. 

“Get in touch with us at the Com- 
modore.’’ To Marrs: “Keep the re- 
porters away for a while. We’ll have 
something for them later.’’ Then we 
left. 

Johnson never did find anyone 
who could lipread Greek. None, at 
least, that could speak English. The 
expert on Russian he dug out of 
Ambridge, in Pennsylvania, the 
Flemish and Holjand Dutch expert 
came from Leyden, in the Nether- 
lands, and at the last minute he 
stumbled upon a Korean who worked 
in Seattle as an inspector for the 
Chinese Government. Five women 
and two men. We signed them to an 
ironclad contract drawn by Samuels, 
who now handled all our legal work. 
I made a little speech before they 
signed. 

“These contracts, as far as we’ve 
been able to make sure, are going to 
control your personal and business 

14T 



life for the next year, and there’s a 
clause that says we can extend that 
period for another year if we so de- 
sire. Let’s get this straight. You 
are to live in a place of your own, 
which we will provide. You will he 
supplied with all necessities by our 
buyers. Any attempt at unauthorized 
communication will result in abro- 
gation of the contract. Is that clear? 

“Good. Your work will not be 
difficult, but it will be tremendously 
important. You will, very likely, be 
finished in three months, but you 
will be ready to go any place at any 
time at our discretion, naturally at 
our expense. Mr. Sorenson, as you 
are taking this down, you realize 
that this goes for you, too.” He 
nodded. 

“Your references, your abilities, 
and your past work have been thor- 
oughly checked, and you will con- 
tinue under constant observation. 
You will be required to verify and 
notarize every page, perhaps every 
line, of your transcripts, which Mr. - 
Sorenson here will supply. Any 
questions ?” 

No questions. Each was getting a 
fabulous salary, and each wanted to 
appear eager to’ earn it. They all 
signed. 

Resourceful Johnson bought for 
us a small rooming house, and we 
paid an exorbitant price to a detec- 
tive agenc/ to do the cooking and 
cleaning and chauffeuring required. 
We requested that the lipreaders re- 
frain from discussing their work 
among themselves, especially in 
front of the house employees, and 
they followed instructions very well. 



One day, about a month later, we 
called a conference in the projection 
room of Johnson’s laboratory. We 
had a single reel of film. 

“What’s that for?” 

“That’s the reason for all the 
cloak-and-dagger secrecy. Never 
mind calling your projection man. 
This Tm going to run through my- 
self. See what you think of it.” 

They were all disgusted. “I’m get- 
ting tired of all this kid stuff,” said 
Kessler. 

As I started for the projection 
booth I heard Mike say, “You’re no 
more tired of it than I am.” 

From the booth I could see what 
was showing on the downstairs 
screen, but nothing else. I ran 
through the reel, rewound, and went 
back down. 

I said, “One more thing, before 
we go any further read this. It’s a 
certified and notarized transcript of 
what has been read from the lips of 
the characters you just saw. They 
weren’t, incidentally, ‘characters,’ in 
that sense of the word.” I handed 
the crackling sheets around, a copy 
for each. “Those ‘characters’ are 
real people. You’ve just seen a news- 
reel. This transcript will tell you 
what they were talking about. Read 
it. In the trunk of the car Mike 
and I have something to show you. 
We’ll be back by the time you’ve 
read it.” 

Mike heli)ed me carry in the ma- 
chine from the car. We came in the 
door in time to see Kessler throw 
the transcript as far as he could. 
He bounced to his feet as the sheets 
fluttered down. 

He was furious. “What’s going 



148 



ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION 



on here ?” We paid no attention to 
him, nor to the excited demands of 
the others until the machine had 
been plugged into the nearest outlet. 

Mike looked at me. “Any ideas ?” 

I shook my head and told Johnson 
to shut up for a minute. Mike lifted 
the lid and hesitated momentarily 
before he touched the dials. I 
pushed Johnson into his chair and 
turned off the lights myself. The 
room went black. Johnson, looking 
over my shoulder, gasped. I heard 
Bernstein swear softly, amazed. 

I turned to see what Mike had 
shown them. 

It was impressive, all right. He 
had started just over the roof of the 
laboratory and continued straight 
up in the air. Up, up, up, until the 
city of Los Angeles was a tiny dot 
on a great ball. On the horizon were 
the Rockies. Johnson grabbed my 
arm. He hurt. 

“What’s that? What’s that? 
Stop it !’’ He was yelling. Mike 
turned off the machine. 

You can guess what happened 
next. No one believed their eyes, 
nor Mike’s patient explanation. He 
had to twice turn on the machine 
again, once going far back into 
Kessler’s past. Then the reaction 
set in. 

Marrs smoked one cigarette after 
another, Bernstein turned a gold 
pencil over and over in his nervous 
fingers, Johnson paced like a caged 
tiger, and burly Kessler stared at 
the machine, saying nothing at all. 
Johnson was muttering as he paced. 
Then he stopped and shook his fist 
under Mike’s nose. 

“Man ! Do you know what you’ve 



got there ? Why waste time playing 
around here? Can’t you see you’ve 
got the world by the tail on a down- 
hill pull? If I’d ever known this — ” 
Mike appealed to me. “Ed, talk 
to this wildman.” 

I did. I can’t remember exactly 
what I said, and it isn’t important. 
But I did tell him how we’d started, 
how we’d plotted our course, and 
what we were going to do. I ended 
by telling him the idea behind the 
reel of film I’d run off a minute be- 
fore. 

He recoiled as though I were a 
snake. “You can’t get away wtih 
that! You’d be hung — if you 
weren’t lynched first!’’ 

“Don’t you think we know that? 
Don’t you think we’re willing to 
take that chance?” 

He tore his thinning hair. Marts 
broke in. “Let me talk to him.” 
He came over and faced us squarely. 

“Is this on the level? You going 
to make a picture like that and stick 
your neck out? You’re going to 
turn that . . . that thing over to 
the people of the world ?” 

I nodded. “Just that.” 

"And toss over everything you’ve 
got?” He was dead serious, and so 
was I. He turned to the others. 
“He means it!” 

Bern.stein said, “Can’t be done!” 
Words flew. I tried to convince 
them that we had followed the only 
possible path. “What kind of a 
world do you want to live in? Or 
don’t you want to live?” 

Johnson grunted. “How long do 
you think we’d live if we ever made 
a picture like that? You’re crazy! 



E FOR EFFORT 



149 



I’m not. I'm not going to put my 
head in a noose.” 

“Wliy do you think we’ve been so 
insistent about credit and responsi- 
bility for direction and production? 
You’ll be doing only what we hired 
yovr for. Not that we want to twist 
your arm, but you’ve made a for- 
tune, all of you, working for us. 
Now, when the going gets heavy, 
you want to back out!” 

Marrs gave in. “Maybe you’re 
right, maybe you’re wrong. Maybe 
you’re crazy, maybe I am. I always 
used to say I’d try anything once. 
Bernie, you?” 

Bernstein was quietly cynical. 
"You saw what happened in the last 
war. This might help. I don’t 
know if it will. I don’t know — but 
I’d hate to think I didn’t try. Count 
me in!” 

Kessler ? 

He swiveled his head. “Kid stuff! 
Who wants to live forever? Who 
wants to let a chance go by?” 

Johnson threw up his hands. 
“Let’s hope we get a cell together. 
Let’s all go crazy.” And that was 
that. 

We went to work in a blazing 
drive of mutual hope and under- 
standing. In four months the lip- 
readers were through. There’s no 
point in detailing here their reac- 
tions to the dynamite they daily dic- 
tated to Sorenson. For their own 
good we kept them in the dark about 
our final purpose, and when they 
were through we sent them across 
the border into Mexico, to a small 
ranch Johnson had leased. We were 
going to need them later. 

TOO 



While the print duplicators 
worked overtime Marrs worked 
harder. The press and the radio 
shouted the announcement that, in 
every city of the world we could 
reach, there would be held the simul- 
taneous premieres of our latest pic- 
ture. It would be the last we 
needed to make. Many wondered 
aloud at our choice of the w'ord 
“needed.” We whetted curiosity by 
refusing any advance information 
about the plot, and Johnson so well 
infused their men with their own 
now-fervent enthusiasm that not 
much could be pried out of them 
but conjecture. The day we picked 
for release was Sunday. Monday, 
the storm broke. 

I wonder how many prints of that 
picture are left today. I wonder 
how many escaped burning or con- 
fiscation. Two World Wars we 
covered, covered from the unflatter- 
ing angles that, up until then, had 
been represented by only a few 
books hidden in the dark corners of 
libraries. We showed and named 
the war-makers, the cynical ones 
who signed and laughed and lied, 
the blatant patriots who used the 
flare of headlines and the ugliness 
of atrocity to hide behind their flag 
while life turned to death for mil- 
lions. Our own and foreign trait- 
ors were there, the hidden ones with 
Janus faces. Our lipreaders had 
done their work well ; no guesses 
these, no deduced conjectures from 
the broken records of a blasted past, 
but the exact words that exposed 
treachery disguised as patriotism. 

In foreign lands the performances 
lasted barely the day. Usually, in 

astounding science-fiction 



etaliation for the imposed censor- 
ship, the theaters were wrecked by 
the raging cro^iul^ (Marrs, inci- 
dently, had spent hundreds of thou- 
sands bribing officials to allow the 
picture to be shown without pre- 
vious censorship. Many censors, 
when that came out, were shot with- 
out trial). In the Balkans, revolu- 
tions broke out, and various embas- 
sies were stormed by mobs. Where 
the film was banned or destroyed 
written versions spontaneously ap- 
peared on the streets or in coffee- 
houses. Bootlegged editions were 
smuggled past customs guards, who 
looked the other way. One royal 
family fled to Switzerland. 

Here in America it was a racing 
two weeks before the Federal Gov- 
ernment, prodded into action by the 
raging of press and radio, in an un- 
precedented move closed all per- 
formances “to promote the common 
welfare, insure domestic tranquil- 
lity, and preserve forengn rela- 
tions.’’ Murmurs — and one riot — 
rumbled in the Midwest and spread 
until it was realized by the powers 
that be that something had to be 
done, and done quickly, if every gov- 
ernment in the world were not to 
collapse of its own weight. 

We were in Mexico, at the ranch 
Johnson had rented for the lipread- 
ers. While Johnson paced the 
floor, jerkily fraying a cigar, we 
listened to a special broadcast of 
the attorney general himself ; 

“. . . furthermore, this message 
was today forwarded to the goverfi- 
ment of the United States of Mex- 
ico. I read : ‘the government of the 
United States of America requests 



the immediate arrest and extradi- 
tion of the following : 

“ ‘Edward Joseph Lefkowicz, 
known as Lefko.’ ’’ First on the list. 
Even a fish wouldn’t get into trouble 
if he kept his mouth shut. 

“ ‘Miguel Jose Zapata Laviada.’ ’’ 
Mike crossed one leg over the other. 

“ ‘Edward Lee Johnson.’ ’’ He 
threw his cigar on the floor and sank 
into a chair. 

“ ‘Robert Chester Marrs.’ ’’ He 
lit another cigarette. His face 
twitched. 

“ ‘Benjamin Lionel Bernstein.’ ” 
He smiled a twisted smile and 
closed his eyes. 

“ ‘Carl Wilhelm Kessler.’ ” A 
snarl. 

“These men are wanted by the 
Government of the United States 
of America, to stand trial on charges 
ranging from criminal syndicalism, 
incitement to riot, suspicion of 
treason — ’’ 

I clicked off the radio. “Well?’’, 
to ho one in particular. 

Bernstein opened his eyes. “The 
rurales are probably on their way. 
Might as well go back and face the 
music — ” We crossed the border 
at Juarez. The FBI was waiting. 

Every press and radio chain in 
the world must have had coverage 
at that trial, every radio system, 
even the new and imperfect tele- 
vision chain. We were allowed to 
see no one but our lawyer. Samuels 
flew from the West Coast and spent 
a week trying to get past our guards. 
He told us not to talk to reporters, 
if we ever saw them. 

“You haven’t seen the newspa- 
pers ? Just as well — How did you 



B FOB EPFOBT 



161 



ever get yourselves into this mess, 
anyway? You ought to know bet- 
ter.” 

I told him. 

He was stunned. “Are you all 
crazy ?” 

He was hard to convince. Only 
the united effort and concerted 
stories of all of us made him believe 
that there was such a machine in 
existence. (He talked to us sepa- 
rately, because we were kept iso- 
lated.) When he got back to me he 
was unable to think coherently. 

“What kind of defense do you 
call that?” 

I shook my head. “No. That is, 
we know that we’re guilty of prac- 
tically everything under the sun if 
you look at it one way. If you look- 
at it another — ” 

He rose. “Man, you don’t need 
a lawyer, you need a doctor. I’ll see 
you later. I’ve got to get this fig- 
ured out in my mind before I can do 
a thing.” 

“Sit down. What do you think 
of this ?” and I outlined what I had 
in mind. 

“I think ... I don’t know what 
I think. I don’t know. I’ll talk to 
you later. Right now I want some 
fresh air,” and he le’ft. 

As most trials do, this one began 
with the usual blackening of the de- 
fendant’s character, or lack of it. 
( The men we’d blackmailed at the 
beginning had long since had their 
money returned, and they had sense 
enough to keep quiet. That might 
have been becau.se they’d received 
a few hints that there might still be 
a negative or two lying around. 

152 



Compounding a felony? Sure.). 
With the greatest of interest we sat 
in that great columned hall and 
listened to a sad tale. 

We had, with malice afore- 
thought, libeled beyond repair great 
and unselfish men who had made a 
career of devotion to the public 
weal, imperiled needlessly relations 
traditionally friendly by falsely re- 
porting mythical events, mocked the 
courageous sacrifices of those who 
had dtilcc ct gloria mori, and com- 
pletely unset everyone’s peace of 
mind. Every new accusation, every 
verbal lance drew solemn agreement 
from the dignitary-packed hall. 
Against someone’s better judgment, 
the trial had been transferred from 
the regular courtroom to the Hall of 
Justice. Packed with influence, 
lirass, and pompous legates from 
over the world, only the congress- 
men from the biggest states, or with 
the biggest votes- were able to crowd 
the newly installed seats. So you 
can see it was a hostile audience that 
faced Samuels when the defense 
had its say. We had spent the pre- 
vious night together in the guarded 
suite to which we had been trans- 
ferred for the duration of the trial, 
perfecting, as far as we could, our 
planned defense. Samuels has the 
arrogant sense of humor that usually 
goes with supreme self-confidence, 
and I’m sure he enjoyed standing 
there among all those bemedaled and 
bejowled bigwigs, knowing the bomb- 
shell he was going to hurl. He made 
a ^ood grenadier. Like this: 

“We believe there is only one de- 
fense possible, we believe there is 
only one defense necessary. We have 

ASTOUNDING SCIMNCE-FICTION 




gladly waived, without prejudice, our 
inalienable right of trial by jury. We 
shall speak plainly 4ind bluntly, to the 
point. 

“You have seen the picture in 
question. You have remarked, pos- 
siby, upon what has been called the 
startling resemblance of the actors in 
that picture to the characters named 
and portrayed. You have remarked, 
ix)ssibly, upon the apparent verisi- 
militude to reality. That I will men- 
tion again. The first witness will, I 
believe, establish the trend of our re- 
buttal of the allegations of the pros- 
ecution.” He called the first witness. 
“Your name, please?” 

“Mercedes Maria Gomez." 

“A little louder, please.” 
“Mercedes Afaria Gomez." 

“Your occupation ?” 

“Until last March I was a teacher 
at the Arizona School for the 
Deaf. Then I asked for and ob- 
tained a leave of'ab.sence. At pres- 



ent I am under personal contract to ' 
Mr. Lefko.” 

“If you see Mr. Lefko in this 
courtroom, Miss . . . Mrs. — ” 

“Miss.” 

“Thank you. If Mr. Lefko is in 
this court will you point him out? 
Thank you. Will you tell us the 
extent of your duties at the Arizona 
School?” 

“I taught children born totally 
deaf to speak. And to read lips.” 

“You read lips yourself, Miss 
Gomez ?” 

“I have been totally deaf since I 
was fifteen.” 

“In English only?” 

“English and Spanish. We have 
. . . had many children of Mexican 
descent.” 

Samuels asked for a designated 
Spanish-speaking interpreter. An 
officer- in the back immediately vol- 
unteered. He was identified by his 
ambassador, who was present. 

“Will you take this book to the 



F, FOU KFFORT 



rear of the courtroom, sir?” To the 
Court : “I f the prosecution wishes to 
(examine that book, they will find that 
it is a Spanish edition of the Bible.” 
The prosecution didn’t wish to ex- 
amine it. 

“Will the officer open the Bible at 
random and read aloud ?” He opened 
the Bible at the center and read. In 
dead silence the Court strained to 
hear. Nothing could be heard the 
length o^f that enormous hall. 

Samuels : “Miss Gomez. Will you 
take these binoculars and repeat, to 
the Court, just what the officer is 
reading at the other end of the 
room ?” 

She took the binoculars and fo- 
cused them expertly on the officer, 
who had stopped reading and was 
watching alertly. “I am ready.”, 

Samuels: “Will you please read, 
sir ?” 

He did, and the Gomez woman re- 
peated aloud, quickly and easily, a 
section that sounded as though it 
might be anything at all. I can’t 
speak Spanish. The officer continued 
to read for a minute or two. 

Samuels: “Thank you, sir. And 
thank you. Miss Gomez. Your par- 
don, sir, but since there are several 
who have been known to memorize 
the Bible, will you tell the Court if 
you have anything on your person 
that is written, anything that Miss 
Gomez has had no chance of view- 
ing?” Yes, the officer had. “Will 
you read that as before ? Will you. 
Miss Gomez — ” 

She read that, too. Then the offi- 
cer came to the front to listeifto the 
court reporter read Miss Gomez’ 
words. 

134 



“That’s what I read,” he affirmed. 

Samuels turned her over to the 
prosecution, who made more experi- 
ments that served only to convince 
that she was equally good as an 
interpreter and lipreader in either 
language. 

In rapid succession -Samuels put 
the rest of the lipreaders on the 
stand. In rapid succession they 
proved themselves as able and as 
capable as Miss Gomez, in their own 
linguistic specialty. The Russian 
from Ambridge generously offered 
to translate into his broken English 
any other Slavic language handy, and 
drew scattered grins from the press 
box. The Court was convinced, but 
failed to see the purpose of the ex- 
hibition. Samuels, glowing with 
satisfaction and confidence, faced the 
Court. 

“Thanks to the indulgence of the 
Court, and despite the efforts of the 
distingui.shed prosecution, we have 
proved the almcjst amazing accuracy 
of lipreading in general, and these 
lipreaders in particular.” One Jus- 
tice absently nodded in agreement. 
“Therefore, our defense will be based 
on that premise, and on one other 
which we have had until now found 
necessary to keep hidden — the pic- 
ture in question was and is definitely 
not a fictional representation of 
events of questionable authenticity. 
Every scene in that film contained, 
not polished professional actors, but 
the original person named and por- 
trayed. Every foot, every inch of 
film was not the result of an elabo- 
rate studio reconstruction but an ac- 
tual collection of pictures, an actual 

A.STOtlXniNG .s n IK. VOK -FICTION 



collection of newsreels — if they can 
be called that — edited and assembled 
in story form !” 

Through the startled spurt of 
astonishment we heard one of the 
prosecution; “That’s ridiculous ! No 
newsreel — ” 

Samuels ignored the objections 
and the tumult to put me on the 
stand. Beyond the usual preliminary 
questions I was allowed to say things 
my own way. At first hostile, the 
Court became interested enough to 
overrule the repeated objections that 
flew from the table devoted to the 
prosecution. I felt that at least two 
of the Court, if not outright favor- 
able, were friendly. As far as I can 
remember, I went over the maneu- 
vers of the past years, and ended 
something like this : 

“As to why we arranged tire cards 
to fall as they did ; both Mr. Laviada 
and myself were unable to face the 
prospect of destroying his discovery, 
because of the inevitable penalizing 
of needed research. We were, and 
we are, unwilling to better ourselves 
or a limited group, by the use and 
maintenance of secrecy, if secrecy 
were possible. As to the only other 
alternative,” and I directed this 
straight at Judge Bronson, the well- 
known liberal on the bench, “since 
the last war all atomic research and 
activity has been under the direction 
of a Board nominally civilian, but 
actually under the ‘protection and 
direction’ of the Army and Navy. 
This ‘direction and protection,’ as 
any competent physicist will gladly 
attest, has proved to be nothing but 
a smothering blanket serving to con- 
ceal hidebound antiquated reasoning, 

E FOR EFFORT 



abysmal ignorance, and inestimable 
amounts of fumbling. As of right 
now, this country, or any country 
that w’as foolish enough to place any 
confidence in the rigid regime of the 
military mind is years behind what 
would otherwise be the natural 
course of discovery and progress in 
nuclear and related fields. 

“We were, and we are, firmly con- 
vinced that even the slightest hint of 
the inherent possibilities and scope 
of Mr. Laviada’s discovery would 
have meant, under the present re- 
gime, instant and mandatory confis- 
cation of even a supposedly secure 
patent. Mr. Laviada has never ap- 
plied for a patent, and never will. 
We both feel that such a discovery 
belongs not to an individual, a group, 
a corporation, or even to a nation, 
but to the world and those who live 
in it. 

“We know, and are eager and will- 
ing to prove, that the domestic and 
external affairs of not only this 
nation, but of every nation are in- 
fluenced, sometimes controlled, by 
esoteric groups warping political the- 
ories and human lives to suit their 
own ends.” The court was smoth- 
ered in sullen silence, thick and acid 
with hate and disbelief. 

“Secret treaties, for example, and 
vicious, lying propaganda have too 
long controlled human passions and 
made mon hate ; honored thieves 
have too long rotted secretly in un- 
deserved high places. The machine 
can make treachery and untruth im- 
ix)ssible. It must, if atomic war is 
not to sear the face and fate of the 
world. 

“Our pictures were all made with 

ISQ 



that end in view. We needed, first, 
the wealth and prominence to present 
to an international audience what we 
knew to be the truth. We have done 
as much as we can. From now on, 
this Court takes over the burden we 
have carried. We are guilty of no 
treachery, guilty of no deceit, guilty 
of nothing but deep and true human- 
ity. Mr. Laviada wishes me to tell 
the Court and the world that he has 
been unable till now to give his dis- 
coverv to the world, free to use as 
it wills.” 

The Court stared at me. Every 
foreign representative was on the 
edge of his seat waiting for the Jus- 
tices to order us shot without further 
ado, the sparkling uniforms were 
seething, and the pressmen were 
racing their pencils against time. 
The tension dried my throat. 
The speech that Samuels and I had 
rehearsed the previous night was 
strong medicine. Now what? 

Samuels filled the breach smooth- 
ly. “I f the Court pleases ; Mr. Lefko 
has made some startling statements. 
Startling, but certainly sincere, and 
certainly either provable or disprov- 
able. And proof it shall be!” 

He strode to the door of the con- 
ference room that had been alloted 
us. As the hundreds of eyes fol- 
lowed him it was easy for me to slip 
down from the witness stand, and 
wait, ready. From the conference 
room Samuels rolled the machine, 
and Mike rose. The whispers that 
curdled the air seemed disappointed, 
unimpressed. Right in front of the 
Bench he trundled it. 

He moved unobtrusively to one 

156 



side as the television men trained 
their long-snouted cameras. “Mr. 
Laviada and Mr. Lefko will show 
you ... I trust there will be no ob- 
jection from the prosecution?” He 
was daring them. 

One of the prosecution was al- 
ready on his feet. He opened his 
mouth hesitantly, but thought better, 
and sat down. Heads went together 
in conference as he did. Samuels w'as 
w’atching the Court with one eye, 
and the courtroom wdth the other. 

“If the Court pleases, we will need 
a cleared space. If the bailiff will 
. . . thank you, sir.” The long tables 
were moved back, with a raw scrap- 
ing. He stood there, with every eye 
in the courtroom glued on him. For 
two long breaths he stood there, then 
he spun and went to his table. “Mr. 
Lefko,” and he bowed formally. He 
sat. 

The eyes swung to me, to Mike, 
as he moved to his machine and 
stood there silently. I cleared my 
throat and spoke to the Bench as 
though I did not see the directional 
microphones trained at my lips. 
“Justice Bronson.” 

He looked steadily at me and then 
glanced at Mike. “Yes, Mr. Lefko?” 
“Your freedom from bias is well 
known.” The corners of his mouth 
went down as he frowned. “Will 
you be willing to be used as proof 
that there can be no trickery?” 
He thought that over, then nodded 
slowly. The prosecution objected, 
and was waved down. “Will you 
tell me exactly where you were at 
any given time? Any place where 
you are absolutely certain and can 

ASTOUNDING SCIENCU-FICTION 



verify that there were no concealed 
catneras or observers ?” 

He thought. Seconds. Minutes. 
The tension twanged, and I swal- 
lowed dust. He spoke quietly. “1918. 
November 11th.” 

Mike whispered to me. I said, 
“Any particular time ?” 

Justice Bronson looked at Mike. 
“Exactly eleven. Armistice time.” 
He paused, then went on. “Niagara 
Falls. Niagara Falls, New York.” 

I heard the dials tick in the still- 
ness, and Mike whispered again. I 
said, “The lights should be off.” The 
bailiff rose. “Will you please watch 
the left wall, or in that direction? I 
think tliat if Justice Kassel will turn 
a little ... we are ready.” 

Bronson looked at me, and at the 
left wall. “Ready.” 

The lights flicked out overhead 
and I heard the television crews mut- 
ter. I touched Mike on the shoul- 
der. “Show them, Mike !” 

We’re all showmen at heart, and 
Mike is no exception. Suddenly out 
of nowhere and into the depths 
poured a frozen torrent. Niagara 
Falls. Fve mentioned, I think, that 
Fve never got over my fear of 
heights. Few people ever do. I 
heard long, shuddery gasps as we 
started straight down. Down, until 
we stopped at the brink of the silent 
cataract, weird in its frozen majesty. 
Mike had stopped time at exactly 
eleven, I knew. Fie shifted to the 
American bank. Slowly he moved 
along. There were a few tourists 
standing in almost comic attitudes. 
There was snow on the ground, 
flakes in the air. Time stood still, 
and hearts slowed in sympathy. 



Bronson snapped, “Stop!” 

A couple, young. Long skirts, 
high-buttoned army collar, dragging 
army overcoat, facing, arms about 
each other. Mike’s sleeve rustled in 
the darkness and they moved. She 
was sobbing and the soldier was 
smiling. She turned away her head, 
and he turned it back. Another 
couple seized them gayly, and tlrey 
twirled breathlessly. 

Bronson’s voice was harsh. 
“That’s enough !” The view blurred 
for seconds. 

Washington. The White House. 
The President. Someone coughed 
like a small explosion. The President 
was watching a television screen. 
He jerked erect suddenly, startled.) 
Mike spoke for the first time in| 
court. 

“That is the President of the 
United States. He is watching the 
trial that is being broadcast and tele- 
vised from this courtroom. He is 
listening to what I am saying right 
now, and he is watching, in his tele- 
vision screen, as I use my machine 
to show him what he was doing one 
second ago.” 

The President heard those fateful 
words. Stiffly he threw an uncon- 
scious glance around his room at 
nothing and looked back at his screen 
in time to see himself do what he just 
had done, one second ago. Slowly, 
as if against his will, his hand started 
toward the switch of his set. 

“Mr. President, don’t turn off that 
set.” Mike’s voice was curt, almost 
rude. “You must hear this, you of 
all people in the world. You must 
understand ! 

“This is not what we wanted to 



E FOR EFFORT 



167 



do, but we have no recourse left but 
to appeal to you, and to the people of 
this twisted world.” The President 
might have been cast in iron. “You 
must see, you must understand that 
you have in your hands the power to 
make it impossible for greed-born 
war to be bred in secrecy and rob 
man of his youth or his old age or 
whatever he prizes.” His voice soft- 
ened, pleaded. “That is all we have 
to say. That is all we want. That 
is all anyone could want, ever.” The 
President, unmoving, faded into 
blackness. “The lights, please,” and 
almost immediately the Court ad- 
journed. That was over a month 
ago. 

Mike’s machine has been taken 
from us, and we are under military 
guard. Probably it’s just as well 
we’re guarded. We understand there 
have been lynching parties, broken 
up only as far as a block or two 
away. Last week we watched a white- 
haired fanatic scream about us, on 
the street below. We couldn’t catch 
what he was shrieking, but we did 
catch a few air-borne epithets. 

“Devils! Anti-Christs! Violation 
of the Bible ! Violations of this and 
that!”* Some, right here in the city, 
I suppose, would be glad to build a 
bonhre to cook us right back to the 
flames from which we’ve sprung. I 
wonder what the various religious 
groups are going to do now that the 
truth can be seen. Who can read 
lips in Aramaic, or Latin, or Cop- 
tic? And is a mechanical miracle a 
miracle ? 

This changes everything. We’ve 
Ijeen moved. Where, I don’t know, 

luS 



except that the weather is warm, and 
we’re on some type of military reser- 
vation, by the lack of civilians. Now 
we know what we're up against. 
What started out to be just a time- 
killing occupation, Joe, has turned 
out to be a necessary preface to what 
Pm going to ask you to do. Finish 
this, and then move fast ! W’e won’t 
be able to get this to you for a while 
yet, so I’ll go on for a bit the way 
I started, to kill time. I.ike our 
clippings : 

TABLOID: 

. . . Such a weapon cannot, must 
not be loosed in unscrupulous hands. 
The last professional production of 
the infamous pair proves what dis- 
tortions can be wrested from iso- 
lated and misunderstood events. In 
the hands of perpetrators of hereti- 
cal isms, no property, no business 
deal, no personal life could be sacro- 
sanct, no foreign policy could be . . 
TIMES: 

. . . colonies stand with us firmly . . . 
liquidation of the Empire . . . white 
man’s burden . . . 

LE MATIN: 

. . . rightful place . . . restore proud 
France . . . 

PRAVDA: 

. . . democratic imperialist plot . . . 
our glorious scientist ready to an- 
nounce .. . . 

NICHI-NICHI: 

. . . incontrovertibly prove divine 
descent ... 

LA PRENSA: 

. . . oil concessions . . . dollar 
diplomacy . . . 

DETROIT JOURNAL: 

. . . under our noses in a sinister 



ASTOUNDING S (M n.\<- 1: - F I CT I O N 



fortress on East Warren . . . under 
close Federal supervision . . . per- 
fection by our production-trained 
technicians a mighty aid to law- 
enforcement agencies . . . tirades 
against politicians and business com- 
mon-sense carried too far . . . to- 
morrow revelations by . . . 

L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO: 
Council of Cardinals . . . announce- 
ment expected hourly , . . 

JACKSON STAR-CXARION : 

. . . proper handling will prove the 
fallacy of race equality . . . 

Almost unanimously the press 
screamed; Pegler frothed, Winchell 
leered. We got the surface side of 
the situation from the press. But a 
military guard is composed of indi- 
viduals, hotel room must be swept 
by maids, waiters must serve food, 
and a chain is as strong — We got 



what we think the truth from those 
who work for a living. 

There are meetings on street cor- 
ners, and homes, two great veteran’s 
groups have arbitrarily fired their 
officials, seven governors have re- 
signed, three senators and over a 
dozen repre.sentatives have retired 
with “ill health,” and the general 
temper is ugly. International travel- 
ers report the same of Europe, Asia 
is bubbling, and transport planes 
with motors running stud the air- 
ports of South America. A general 
whisper is that a Constitutional 
Amendment is being rammed 
through to forbid the use of any 
similar instrument by any individ- 
ual, with the manufacture and leas- 
ing by the Federal government to 
law-enforcement agencies or finan- 
cially-responsible corporations sug- 



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gested; it is whispered that motor 
caravans are forming throughout the 
country for a Washington march 
to demand a decision by the Court 
on the truth of our charges; it is 
generally suspected that all news dis- 
seminating services are under direct 
Federal — Anny — control ; wires are 
supposed to be sizzling with petitions 
and demands to Congress, which are 
seldom delivered. 

One day the chambermaid said: 
“And the whole hotel might as well 
close up shop. The whole floor is 
blocked off, there’re MP’s at every 
door, and they’re clearing out all the 
other guests as fast as they can be 
moved. The whole place wouldn’t 
be big enough to hold the letters and 
wires addressed to you, or the ones 
that are trying to get in to see you. 
Fat chance they have,’ she added 
grimly. “The joint is lousy with 
brass.’’ 

Mike glanced at me and I Cleared 
my throat. “What’s your idea of 
the whole thing?” 

Expertly she spanked and reversed 
a pillow. “I saw your last picture 
Ijcfore they shut it down. I saw all 
your pictures. When I wasn’t work- 
ing I listened to your trial. I heard 
you tell them off. I never got mar- 
ried because my boy friend never 
came back from Burma. Ask him 
what he thinks,” and she jerked her 
head at the young private that was 
supposed to keep her from talking. 
“Ask him if he wants some bunch of 
stinkers to start him shooting at some 
other poor chump. See what he says, 
and then ask me if I want an atom 
bomb dropped down my neck just 
because some chiselers want more 

160 



■ than they got.” She left suddenly, 
and the soldier left with her. Mike 
and I had a beer and went to bed. 
Next week the papers- had headilnes 
a mile high. 

U. S. KEEPS MIRACLE RAY 
CONSTITUTION 
• AMENDMENT 
AWAITS STATES OKAY 
LAVIADA-LEFKO FREED 
We were freed all right, Bronson 
and the President being responsible 
for that. But the President and 
Bronson don’t know. I’m sure, that 
we were rearrested immediately. W e 
were told that we’ll be held in “pro- 
tective custody” until enough states 
have ratified the proposed constitu- 
tional amendment. The Man With- 
out a Country was in what you 
might call “protective custody,” too. 
We’ll likely be released the same way 
he was. 

We’re allowed no newspapers, 
no radio, allowed no communication 
coming or going, and we’re given 
no reason, as if that were necessary. 
They’ll never, never let us go, and 
they’d be fools if they did. They 
think that if we can’t communicate, 
or if we can’t build another ma- 
chine, our fangs are drawn, and 
when the excitement dies, we fall 
into oblivion, 'six feet of it. Well, 
we caa’t build another machine. But, 
communicate ? 

Look at it this way. A soldier is 
a soldier because he wants to serve 
his country. A soldier doesn’t want 
to die unless his country is at war. 
Even then death is only a last resort. 
And war isn’t necessary any more, 
not with our machine. In the dark ? 

ASTOUNDING SCIBNCE-FICTTO-N 



Try to plan or plot in absolute dark- 
ness, which is what would be needed. 
Try to plot or carry on a war with- 
out putting things in writing. O.K. 
Now — 

The Anny has Mike’s machine. 
The Army has Mike. They call it 
military expediency, I suppose. 
Bosh ! Anyone beyond the grade of 
moron can see that to keep that ma- 
chine, to liide it, is to invite the world 
to attack, and attack in self-defense. 
If every nation, or if every man, had 
a machine, each would be equally 
open, or equally protected. But if 
only one’ nation, or only one man 
can see, the rest will not long be 
blind. Mavbe we did this all wrong. 
God knows that we thought about it 
often. God knows we did our best 
to make an effort at keeping man out 
of his own trap. 



There isn’t much time left. One 
of the soldiers guarding us will get 
this to you, I hope, in time. 

A long time ago we gave you a 
key, and hoped we would never have 
to ask you to use it. But now is the 
time. That key fits a box at the De- 
troit Savings Bank. In that box are 
letters. Mail them, not all at once, or 
in the same place. They’ll go all 
over the world, to men we know, 
and have watched well : clever, hon- 
est, and capable of following the 
plans we’ve enclosed. 

But you’ve got to hurry ! One of 
these bright days someone is going 
to wonder if we’ve made more than 
one machine. We haven’t, of course. 
That would have been foolish. But 
if some smart young lieutenant gets 
hold of that machine long enough to 
start tracing back our movements 



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E FOR EFFORT 



KU 



they’ll line! that safety deposit box, 
with the plans and letters ready to 
be scattered broadside. You can see 
the need for haste — if the rest of 
the. world, or any particular nation, 
wants that machine bad enough, 
they’ll fight for it. And they will! 
They must! Later on, when the 
Army gets used to the machine and 
its capabilities, it will become obvi- 
ous to everyone, as it- already has to 
Mike and me, that, with every plan 
open to inspection as soon as it’s 
made, no nation or group of nations 
would have a chance in open war- 
fare. So if there is to be an attack, 
it will have to be deadly, and fast, 
and sure. Please God that we haven’t 
shoved the world into a war we tried 
to make impossible. With all the 
atom Irombs and rockets that have 
been made in the past few years — 
Joe, you’ve got to hurry! 

('Jig TO 9TH ATTK GRP 

Rei)ort report report report report 
report report report report report 

CMDR 9TH ATTK GRP TO GHQ 

BEGINS: No other manuscript 
found. Searched body of Lefko im- 
!iiediately upon landing. According 
to ])lan Building Three untouched. 
Survivors insist both were moved 
from Building Seven previous day 
defective plumbing. Body of Laviada 
identified definitely through finger- 
jirints. Request further instructions. 
ENDS 



GHQ TO CMDR 32ND 
.SHIELDED RGT 

BEGINS : Seal area Detroit Sav-' 
ings Bank. Advise immediately con- 
dition safety deposit boxes. Afford 
coming technical unit complete co- 
operation. ENDS 

LT. COL. TEMP. ATT. 

.32ND SHIELDED RGT. 

BEGINS: .\rea Detroit .Savings 
Bank vaporized direct hit. Radio- 
activity lethal. Impossible boxes or 
any contents survive. Repeat, direct 
hit. Request permission- proceed 
Washington Area. ENDS. 

GHQ. TO LT. COL. TEMP. ATT. 

32ND SHIELDED RGT 

BEGINS : Request denied. Sift 
ashes if necessary regardless cost. 
Repeat, regardless cost. ENDS 

GHQ. TO ALL UNITS REPEAT 
ALL UNITS 

BEGINS: Lack of enemy re.sist- 
ance explained misdirected atom 
rocket seventeen miles .SSE Wash- 
ington. Lone survivor completely 
destroyed special train claims all top 
officials left enemy capital two hours 
preceding attack. Notify local gov- 
ernments wdiere found necessary and 
obvious cessation hostilities. Occupy 
present areas Plan Two. Further or- 
ders follow. ENDS 



THE END. 






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AUDELS Carpenters 
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vols.^6 



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How to use the steel square — How to file and set 
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